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1 of medication error reporting among Chinese nurses.
2 rvical images, which were reviewed weekly by nurses.
3 physicians, advanced practice providers, and nurses.
4 e not perceived of importance by patients or nurses.
5 Participants were 48 night- and 42 day-shift nurses.
6 particularly true for night only shift work nurses.
7 h nearly half (49.4%) of positive HCWs being nurses.
8 = 119) received DR-BNI led by trained dental nurses.
9 ediated by individualised relational work by nurses.
10 ived a JADE report with group empowerment by nurses.
11 hroughout their shifts compared to day shift nurses.
12 each of these six studies were international nurses.
13 lists of the California Board of Registered Nurses (2000 nurses in 2013 and 3000 nurses in 2016).
15 er nurse ratio greater than 41 for both mean Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nurs
16 er nurse ratio greater than 61 for both mean Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nurs
18 ase-mix adjustment the association between a Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio greater than 61
19 Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio on day 1 and in
20 Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio on day 1 were a
22 f mean or day 1 patients per nurse ratio and Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio with in-hospita
26 , to celebrate the International Year of the Nurse and Midwife, we highlight the contribution and imp
27 The exposure to the head of radiologist, nurse and radiographer was 2.1muSv, 1.4muSv, and 0.6muSv
28 on exposure to locations that a Radiologist, Nurse and Radiographer would be standing during the proc
29 a questionnaire on their pregnancy with the nurse and their nurse daughter's early life experience.
31 ion of the impact of extending the shifts of nurses and health care assistants from 8 to 12 hours.
32 d to physical and mental health problems for nurses and may also affect the nursing care quality for
34 nagement interventions have been assessed in nurses and midwives and what is their evidence-base?
35 related/fatigue-management interventions for nurses and midwives is fragmented and lacks cohesion.
38 nurses (working as staff nurses, while head nurses and nurse managers were excluded) and 829 patient
39 ng shifts for nursing staff (both registered nurses and nursing assistants) working in hospitals have
43 d: (1) studies conducted in adult samples of nurses and/or midwives that had evaluated a sleep-relate
44 ), The Cochrane Library, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and PsycI
45 edica Database), CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature), MEDLINE, Scopus,
46 re from Medline, Embase, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and the Cochrane L
47 nurses and midwives (10.06 [6.68-15.13]) and nursing and medical assistants (5.93 [4.05-8.71]) also s
48 meless health facilities, including outreach nurses, and (2) antiretroviral therapy (ART) via communi
49 Participants, clinicians, pharmacists, trial nurses, and midwives were masked to study group assignme
50 e proposes one way to ensure enough doctors, nurses, and pharmacists during the COVID-19 pandemic: En
52 ncept of empathy within nursing, explain why nurses are sometimes warry of adapting concepts from oth
53 eview explored both the role and function of nurses, as well as their experiences and perspectives of
55 e suggested that interventions that included nurse assessment tools (3 studies) or a close observatio
56 or nursing staff (both registered nurses and nursing assistants) working in hospitals have been adopt
58 f system-level resilience were identified in nurses' behaviour: anticipatory resilience, responsive r
59 With an increasing number of international nurses being recruited to work in the UK, this review ra
60 in the UK, including within their role as a nurse, but also in finding and building positive relatio
61 erentiation were found in gut mucosa of mice nursed by mothers exposed to D pteronyssinus compared wi
63 ther a 12-month intervention consisting of a nurse care manager with an interactive electronic regist
64 The current article provides a review of nursing care for the different complications of patients
65 and there is very limited information about nursing care of patients with cirrhosis compared with ot
67 nough staff for quality or leaving necessary nursing care undone, after controlling for the staffing
68 ts with 24-hour support for personal care or nursing care), although the evidence on whether probioti
70 es as it attempts to develop a multinucleate nurse cell (syncytium) serving to nourish the nematode o
72 PRC2-dependent silencing globally, while in nurse cells Pcl declines and newly induced Scm concentra
73 Sertoli cells, also known as 'mother' or 'nurse' cells, provide nutrients, paracrine factors, cyto
76 suggest a positive impact on newly qualified nurses' competency, level of confidence and attrition ra
78 ess, while the quantitative arm investigated nurses' contribution to patient flow in terms of length
84 rsations with staff, scrutiny of medical and nursing documentation, and measures of patient health st
85 portive care, the central pillar of oncology nursing, enables and empowers people to self-manage wher
87 ant role in the development of obesity among nurses, especially in America, Europe and Australia.
88 fectiveness (SAFTE(tm)), whereby night shift nurses experienced substantial decline-frequently into t
89 rs and senior managers need to capitalise on nurses' experiential knowledge and skills to enhance the
90 the history of the concept of empathy within nursing, explain why nurses are sometimes warry of adapt
91 Improvement (BPCI) model 3, in which skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) assumed accountability for pat
92 care hospitals (ACHs; 141, 50%) and skilled nursing facilities (SNFs; 113, 40%), and less frequently
93 acilities, and 12 ventilator-capable skilled nursing facilities) in the Chicago metropolitan area, su
94 long-term acute care hospitals, 351 skilled nursing facilities, and 12 ventilator-capable skilled nu
96 st known outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 at a skilled nursing facility (SNF) in Illinois on 15 March 2020 and
97 beneficiaries who were admitted to a skilled nursing facility after an inpatient hospital admission,
100 ive and spent outside of a hospital, skilled nursing facility, or intermediate-/long-term acute care
101 f they survive to discharge from the skilled nursing facility, they are more likely to go next to a c
102 ification of a case of Covid-19 in a skilled nursing facility, we assessed transmission and evaluated
105 ssion were more likely to die in the skilled nursing facility; more likely to be readmitted to an acu
108 ren be reviewed by consultants or specialist nurses formally trained in allergy compared with consult
109 ve and snowball sampling was used to recruit nurses from across the home care agency with varied year
111 hospital's management to effectively protect nurses from obesity, and the health risks associated wit
112 ionwide Danish Nurse Cohort on 22,882 female nurses ( > 44 years of age) who, at recruitment in 1993
117 of whom 1,897 developed incident T2D, in the Nurses' Health Study (1984-2016), Nurses' Health Study I
118 prospectively followed 74,578 women from the Nurses' Health Study (NHS) (1984-2016), 91,656 women fro
119 ge baseline age was 63) participating in the Nurses' Health Study (NHS), an ongoing cohort study init
120 mic profiles, mostly lipid related, from the Nurses' Health Study (NHS, n = 1460) and Health Professi
123 We conducted a nested case-control study in Nurses' Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-Up
124 2D, in the Nurses' Health Study (1984-2016), Nurses' Health Study II (1989-2016), and Health Professi
127 etrospective cohort study based on quarterly nursing home assessments between April 2014 and January
134 t due to aging population, growing number of nursing home residents, poorly understood biology, and d
135 associated diarrhea (AAD) occurs in 2-25% of nursing home residents, which may lead to dehydration, m
137 r adjusting for 14 resident characteristics, nursing home urine culturing predicted total antibiotic
138 ospital administration; $255 versus $123 for nursing home, home care, and hospice administration; and
141 s between April 2014 and January 2017 in 591 nursing homes and covering >90% of nursing home resident
142 In addition, the heterogeneous burdens in nursing homes and the variable reporting of deaths of ol
143 age structures and heterogeneous burdens in nursing homes explain some but not all of the heterogene
146 esidents in care homes (residential homes or nursing homes that provide residents with 24-hour suppor
147 care facilities, including 59 hospitals, 92 nursing homes, 1 long-term acute care hospital (LTACH),
148 plementation of probiotics to prevent AAD in nursing homes, to evaluate effects on AAD occurrence, an
152 through prisons in much the same way it has nursing homes: after being introduced by staff or newly
153 ated at the facility unit level and included nursing hours per patient day (NHPPD) for all nursing pe
154 However, the differential change in rate of nursing hours per patient day following implementation o
162 t administrative data and rosters) linked to nurses-in-charge's reports from 81 wards within four Eng
163 ns between the proportion of long shifts and nurses-in-charge's reports of having enough staff for qu
168 alistic environment where patients underwent nurse-led structured evaluation (blood/urine/eye/feet) i
169 usual standard of antenatal care (ANC) in 7 nurse-led, public-sector primary care clinics-combined i
172 cs, higher numbers of border-states adopting Nursing License Compact membership (Odds Ratio=0.51; 95%
176 rking as staff nurses, while head nurses and nurse managers were excluded) and 829 patients aged 18 y
177 undertaken with 33 nursing staff, 17 senior nurse managers, 34 patients and 28 family carers from th
178 ortance of spirituality among clinicians and nurses may improve cultural competence in healthcare ser
180 gement Systems to protect against fatigue in nurses, midwives, and other shift working healthcare sta
181 eds (OR, 1.14 [95% CI 1.02-1.27], p = 0.02), nurses/midwives (OR, 1.24 [95% CI 1.06-1.44], p = 0.006)
182 portance of considering the immune status of nursing mothers in studies of immune development and res
183 iders [n = 20], medical assistants [n = 16], nurses [n = 4], technologists [n = 4], and administrator
185 of two separate measurement periods for each nurse-once for three consecutive days while they were wo
188 lth service readiness (number of physicians, nurses, or hospital beds per 1,000 people) and performan
189 are interventions, RN skill mix, and the two nurse outcomes were associated with a decrease in unit-a
190 tween context, staffing, care interventions, nurse outcomes, and pressure ulcer rates, using unit-lev
191 additional clinical and scientific experts, nurses, patient representatives, and a methodologist dev
192 notes review' included a random selection of nurse-patient consultations July-December 2015, 743 cons
194 patient handling programs in hospitals, and nurses' perceptions, work practices, and musculoskeletal
195 ce based on past experience, workarounds and nurses performing informal 'risk assessments' in relatio
196 ursing hours per patient day (NHPPD) for all nursing personnel and number of catheter-associated urin
199 ified in the literature for implications for nursing practice and the nursing workforce from regulato
203 where parties interested in seeing increased Nurse Practitioner independence should focus their effor
207 re more restrictive than others, and prevent Nurse Practitioners from working to the full extent of t
208 aracteristics that we include are numbers of Nurse Practitioners, Primary Care Physicians and rural h
211 -December 2015, 743 consultations managed by nurse prescribers and 939 consultations by patient group
213 involved the provision of 1357 medications (nurse prescribers=399, 54%; patient group directions=480
216 nit-level data from the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators((R)) 2010-2013 (16 quarters)
217 he association of mean or day 1 patients per nurse ratio and Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio
218 1 for both mean Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nursing Activities Score per nurs
219 1 for both mean Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nursing Activities Score per nurs
221 ation between a Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio greater than 61 for both mean Nursing Activi
222 atio as well as Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio on day 1 and in-hospital mortality remained
223 atio as well as Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio on day 1 were associated with a higher in-ho
226 nurse ratio and Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio with in-hospital mortality was analyzed usin
227 ociation of the Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio, respectively, the patients per nurse ratio
228 o association was found between patients per nurse ratios and in-hospital mortality in The Netherland
229 e studies expressed workload as patients per nurse ratios; however, this does not take into account t
230 ective countermeasures for drowsy driving in nurses requires a thorough characterization of nurse's p
233 poor, despite this being a key aspect of the nursing role and a major contributor to positive outcome
236 professionals' perspectives on second-level nursing roles: a systematic review and thematic synthesi
237 rses requires a thorough characterization of nurse's perceptions of drowsy driving and potential miti
238 t necessarily linked to more improvements in nurses' safe work practices and experiences of musculosk
240 the Veterans Health Administration Office of Nursing Services (VHA ONS) issued a Staffing Methodology
242 cepts from other disciplines, and argue that nurses should distinguish between adapting concepts from
244 and mitigation methods traversed through the nurses' social network although they did not always alte
245 dicine, palliative care, pediatric medicine, nursing, social work, gerontology, geriatrics, patient a
246 eipt of initial assessments by a lung cancer nurse specialist and according to trust-level reported w
248 ning [Willingness to pay (WTP) estimates for nurse specialist pound 150.9 (138.8-163.2), trained alle
249 ides initial measures of overall lung cancer nurse specialist working practices at trusts, however, m
250 who received an assessment by a lung cancer nurse specialist, compared with no assessment (hazard ra
251 with longitudinal measurement of lung cancer nurse specialist-patient interaction are needed to bette
252 d multidisciplinary team [ideally physician, nurse (specialist), social worker, transplant coordinato
254 difficulty retaining staff, long shifts for nursing staff (both registered nurses and nursing assist
258 The evidence base for methods to support nursing staff to develop and maintain good therapeutic r
259 tructured interviews were undertaken with 33 nursing staff, 17 senior nurse managers, 34 patients and
264 Our results reveal that the modern human nursing strategy, with onset of weaning at 5 to 6 mo, wa
265 All studies investigated interventions for nursing students or professionals working in hospitals o
268 alysis limited only to the studies of female nurses, the obesity risk was found not to be statistical
273 tervention provides opportunities for dental nurses to facilitate behavior change improving the oral
274 egative in the absence of relational work by nurses to maintain people's identity, establish caring c
276 d the need for permission as key in enabling nurses to self-care and be self-compassionate, which may
277 sed on the need to effectively support these nurses to successfully integrate into work and the wider
278 on from hospice being based on excellence in nursing to teams with a broad range of health profession
279 e emic and etic perspectives of second-level nurses, to ensure collaborative teamwork and safe patien
281 quality improvement), staffing (e.g., lower nurse-to-patient ratios and ready availability of psycho
285 ons between care interventions, hospital and nursing unit characteristics and pressure ulcer rates.
286 ars controlling for community, hospital, and nursing unit characteristics in rural and urban location
288 where the sleep of 12hr day and night shift nurses was measured using ReadiBand wrist actigraphs.
289 o investigate the link between presenteeism, nurse well-being quality of patient care and costs in th
290 hough 78% (n = 49) of reviews mentioned that nurses were involved in a proportion of studies deliveri
292 were 479 registered nurses (working as staff nurses, while head nurses and nurse managers were exclud
294 or implications for nursing practice and the nursing workforce from regulatory and labour provisions
295 iewed is of international importance for the nursing workforce, nursing practice and public health.
298 ICU patients admitted to and registered ICU nurses working at 15 Dutch ICUs between January 1, 2016,