Here are four insights:
1. The responses showed a correlation between fewer nurses, more missed care and an increase in patient mortality.
2. For patients who underwent common, non-life threatening surgeries, researchers associated a 10 percent missed care rate to a 16 percent higher patient mortality risk within 30 days of surgery.
3. Seventy-four percent of those surveyed said they did not perform care due to time constraints.
4. Jane Ball, RN, a study researcher aid doctoral student at Karolinska Institutet’s department of learning, informatics, management and ethics, said, “We found a significant association between mortality rates and the volume of missed care owing to lack of nursing time, which supports the inference of a causal connection between registered nurse staffing and patient mortality.”
More articles on quality and infection control:
WHO: 4 things to know about hand hygiene
Lowering elderly patients’ fall risk: 4 study insights
90%+ of healthcare leaders cite drug shortages as major concern: 4 survey findings
At the Becker's 23rd Annual Spine, Orthopedic and Pain Management-Driven ASC + The Future of Spine Conference, taking place June 11-13 in Chicago, spine surgeons, orthopedic leaders and ASC executives will come together to explore minimally invasive techniques, ASC growth strategies and innovations shaping the future of outpatient spine care. Apply for complimentary registration now.
