Rationing of nursing care and its relationship to patient outcomes: the Swiss extension of the International Hospital Outcomes Study

被引:235
|
作者
Schubert, Maria [1 ]
Glass, Tracy R. [2 ]
Clarke, Sean P. [3 ]
Aiken, Linda H. [3 ]
Schaffert-Witvliet, Bianca [1 ]
Sloane, Douglas M. [3 ]
De Geest, Sabina [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Basel, Inst Nursing Sci, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland
[2] Basel Inst Clin Epidemiol, Basel, Switzerland
[3] Univ Pennsylvania, Sch Nursing, Ctr Hlth Outcomes & Policy Res, Philadelphia, PA USA
关键词
healthcare rationing; organizational factors; patient outcomes; quality of hospital care;
D O I
10.1093/intqhc/mzn017
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives. To explore the association between implicit rationing of nursing care and selected patient outcomes in Swiss hospitals, adjusting for major organizational variables, including the quality of the nurse practice environment and the level of nurse staffing. Rationing was measured using the newly developed Basel Extent of Rationing of Nursing Care (BERNCA) instrument. Additional data were collected using an adapted version of the International Hospital Outcomes Study questionnaire. Design. Multi-hospital cross-sectional surveys of patients and nurses. Setting. Eight Swiss acute care hospitals Participants. Nurses (1338) and patients (779) on 118 medical, surgical and gynecological units. Main outcome measures. Patient satisfaction, nurse-reported medication errors, patient falls, nosocomial infections, pressure ulcers and critical incidents involving patients over the previous year. Results. Generally, nurses reported rarely having omitted any of the 20 nursing tasks listed in the BERNCA over their last 7 working days. However, despite relatively low levels, implicit rationing of nursing care was a significant predictor of all six patient outcomes studied. Although the adequacy of nursing resources was a significant predictor for most of the patient outcomes in unadjusted models, it was not an independent predictor in the adjusted models. Low nursing resource adequacy ratings were a significant predictor for five of the six patient outcomes in the unadjusted models, but not in the adjusted ones. Conclusion. As a system factor in acute general hospitals, implicit rationing of nursing care is an important new predictor of patient outcomes and merits further study.
引用
收藏
页码:227 / 237
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL NURSING COLLABORATION: STRATEGIES TO IMPROVE PATIENT OUTCOMES
    Nixon, Colleen
    Chordas, Christine
    Kathleen, Houlahan
    Hitchko, Louise
    Kelly, Tara
    Meegan, Anne Marie
    O'Connor, Melissa
    Pruden, Patricia
    Sayeed, Raga
    Fouad, Neama
    Abouelnaga, Sherif
    [J]. PEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER, 2010, 55 (05) : 967 - 967
  • [32] Levels and correlates of implicit rationing of nursing care in Swiss acute care hospitals-A cross sectional study
    Schubert, Maria
    Ausserhofer, Dietmar
    Desmedt, Mario
    Schwendimann, Rene
    Lesaffre, Emmanuel
    Li, Baoyue
    De Geest, Sabina
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES, 2013, 50 (02) : 230 - 239
  • [33] NANDA International nursing diagnoses in the coping/stress tolerance domain and their linkages to Nursing Outcomes Classification outcomes and Nursing Interventions Classification interventions in the pre-hospital emergency care
    Sanchez-Almagro, Cesar Pedro
    Romero-Sanchez, Jose Manuel
    White-Rios, Melanie
    Gonzalez del Pino, Carlos Antonio
    Paloma-Castro, Olga
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2022, 78 (10) : 3273 - 3289
  • [34] Continuity of care and patient outcomes after hospital discharge
    van Walraven, C
    Mamdani, M
    Fang, JM
    Austin, PC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2004, 19 (06) : 624 - U12
  • [35] Continuity of care and patient outcomes after hospital discharge
    Carl van Walraven
    Muhammad Mamdani
    Jiming Fang
    Peter C. Austin
    [J]. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2004, 19 : 624 - 631
  • [36] Patient Reported Outcomes of Pastoral Care in a Hospital Setting
    Lobb, Elizabeth A.
    Schmidt, Susanne
    Jerzmanowska, Natalia
    Swing, Ashley M.
    Thristiawati, Safrina
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE CHAPLAINCY, 2019, 25 (04) : 131 - 146
  • [37] Rationing of nursing care interventions and its association with nurse-reported outcomes in the neonatal intensive care unit: A cross-sectional survey
    Rochefort C.M.
    Rathwell B.A.
    Clarke S.P.
    [J]. BMC Nursing, 15 (1)
  • [38] Continuing Nursing Education and Outcomes: Making a Difference in Patient Care
    Smith, Elaine L.
    Rice, Karen L.
    Garafalo, Lena
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CONTINUING EDUCATION IN NURSING, 2016, 47 (03): : 103 - 105
  • [39] Transforming care strategies and nursing-sensitive patient outcomes
    Chaboyer, Wendy
    Johnson, Joanne
    Hardy, Linda
    Gehrke, Tanya
    Panuwatwanich, Kriengsak
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2010, 66 (05) : 1111 - 1119
  • [40] The Impact of Specialized Oncology Nursing on Patient Supportive Care Outcomes
    Sussman, Jonathan
    Howell, Doris
    Bainbridge, Daryl
    Brazil, Kevin
    Pyette, Nancy
    Abbasi, Saqib
    Whelan, Timothy
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOCIAL ONCOLOGY, 2011, 29 (03) : 286 - 307