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1 , and enacted by an unmasked DBS programming nurse).
2 als (predominantly community palliative care nurses).
3 ly associated with the smoking status of the nurse.
4 essment of Pediatric Delirium by the bedside nurse.
5 s, including semi-structured interviews with nurses.
6 sia providers, scrub nurses, and circulating nurses.
7 edictions were made by 47 physicians and 128 nurses.
8 ssociated with back pain for male and female nurses.
9  log of monthly earnings for male and female nurses.
10  distress total score between physicians and nurses.
11 on and later back pain among female military nurses.
12 thin 3 hours after extubation by trained ICU nurses.
13 h they will soon be in practice as qualified nurses.
14  these 13, interviews were conducted with 11 nurses.
15 ecificity (95% CI) was 81%(62%-92%) for both nurses.
16           The study participants included 38 nurses, 100% (n = 38) of whom were white and 92% (n = 35
17 ively recruited nursing staff (17 registered nurses; 5 nursing assistants).
18          Over 108.4h, 41 different staff (35 nurses, 6 carers) were observed to administer medication
19 ference, 47% [95% CI, 14% to 73%], P = .007; nurses: 77% for the lorazepam + haloperidol group vs 30%
20 patient-centered care: 90% easily understood nurses, 91% felt the treatment and care were adapted for
21 reatment allocation, and an unmasked team of nurses administered the vaccines.
22  PubMed, EMBASE, and the Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature were searched to iden
23 are substantial among registered nurses, and nurses also report high rates of depression.
24                                              Nurse and postal delivery achieved similar 12-mo PA outc
25 ], staffing [only 26/44 (59%) had specialist nurses and 18/44 (41%) an anaesthetist] and provision of
26                                   Twenty-two nurses and 19 patients participated.
27 s of changing care providers from doctors to nurses and as the majority of cost data available has te
28                                              Nurses and carers administering medications.
29 ministered by two well-trained critical care nurses and compared with reference standard assessments
30 entatives from the UK Association of Genetic Nurses and Counsellors, Canadian Association of Genetic
31 cial skills and nurse-patient interaction of nurses and emphasizes the need for implementing institut
32 eived nonbeneficial treatment and to compare nurses and junior and senior physicians.
33                                          ICU nurses and physicians.
34                                   Thirty-six nurses and social workers from two Michigan Medicaid Wai
35 , retention, and professional development of nurses and the other workforces, and the longer term imp
36 r global impact of increasing the numbers of nurses and their contribution to healthcare through impr
37                              Vascular access nurses and their perceived role as part of the healthcar
38 parities between clinics run by chemotherapy nurses and those run by advanced nurse practitioners.
39 a Database (EMBASE), the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL+), the Heal
40  PubMed, Web of Science, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature and Cochrane Librar
41 as carried out using the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Dentistry and Oral
42 erence Papers Index, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Excerpta Medica Da
43 ealth, Cochrane Library, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Scopus, and Medlin
44                                     Multiple nursing and healthcare databases were searched using rel
45 d the factors that influence disadvantage in nursing and other professions such as physiotherapy.
46 ery rely on PAC facilities including skilled nursing and rehabilitation centers to help them recover
47 gical residents, anesthesia providers, scrub nurses, and circulating nurses.
48 h-care professionals, including pharmacists, nurses, and community health workers, to meet the needs
49        MRSA hand carriage rates in patients, nurses, and dentists were 9.8%, 6.6%, and 5%.
50  pain rates are substantial among registered nurses, and nurses also report high rates of depression.
51 on and uptake of test results by clinicians, nurses, and patients, which will be vital in ensuring vi
52                 Obesity complicates medical, nursing, and informal care in severe illness, but its ef
53 ce use data (e.g., hospitalizations, skilled nursing, and rehabilitation facility stays) were collect
54                        The smoking status of nurses appears to have a negative impact in the delivery
55                                      The way nurses approach patients, and how patient-centred they a
56 sible healthy lifestyle of the nurse or that nurses are more willing to promote the health of their p
57 es among patients, but the response times of nurses are slow.
58                                Critical care nurses, are the primary care providers to patients and f
59  (ii) adult population age >/=16years, (iii) nurse as part of the care team or intervention delivery,
60 nographic research on the organising work of nurses as an empirical reference.
61  years of experience), if there was a 1 to 1 nursing assignment (3.5 minutes [95% CI, 1.3-5.7] vs 10.
62 ith dementia (mean age=86), and 19 certified nursing assistants (mean age=36) in 8 nursing homes.
63 uited nursing staff (17 registered nurses; 5 nursing assistants).
64 led by medical consultants, which can reduce nurses' autonomy and negatively impact on patient care.
65                          ICU physicians' and nurses' binary predictions of in-hospital mortality and
66 was assessed at baseline, 2, 4, and 6 mo, by nurses blinded to treatment allocation, using the Eczema
67 ficial treatment among junior physicians and nurses (both p </= 0.001) but not among senior physician
68 .Sprague-Dawley neonatal rats (n = 104) were nursed by mothers fed a VA-marginal diet (0.35 mg retino
69 e identified in several topics in four basic nursing care activities: comprehensive assessment, perio
70 s providing innovations for the use of basic nursing care although the innovations are emerging and s
71                                              Nursing care and research should focus more on adolescen
72 ings technology can be used to promote basic nursing care in the hospital environment by improving th
73                                       Missed nursing care may be a significant predictor of patient m
74  analyses support the hypothesis that missed nursing care mediates the relationship between registere
75 nment and the level of implicit rationing of nursing care should be taken into consideration.
76  and a 10% increase in the percent of missed nursing care were associated with a 7% (OR 1.068, 95% CI
77                                       Missed nursing care, which is highly related to nurse staffing,
78 p ability and level of implicit rationing of nursing care.
79 e comfortable by both blinded caregivers and nurses (caregivers: 84% for the lorazepam + haloperidol
80 -5.7] vs 10.6 minutes [95% CI, 5.3-16.0] for nurses caring for 2 or more patients), if there were pri
81  show that knockdown of Hop in the germ line nurse cells (GLKD) of Drosophila ovaries leads to activa
82  is to transport cytoplasmic materials from 'nurse' cells to oocytes, a critical process for developi
83 ing categories; patient-centred handover and nurse-centred handover.
84  with patients, family members, doctors, and nursing colleagues.
85            A total of 368 students from four nursing colleges in South Korea participated.
86 recall, comfort (perceived by caregivers and nurses), communication capacity, delirium severity, adve
87                                              Nurses completed questionnaires assessing perceived staf
88 ide an overview of the research evidence for nurses' contributions to healthcare to inform discussion
89 s performed a randomized controlled trial of nurse-coordinated referral of patients and their partner
90 gists, gastroenterologists, a social worker, nurse coordinator, surgeon, epidemiologist, statistician
91 ase in blood culture contamination while the nurses (did not use the ISDD) did not.
92                          ICU physicians' and nurses' discriminative accuracy in predicting 6-month ou
93 formation was exchanged between patients and nurses due to: lost opportunities for sharing informatio
94 h care and thus is an essential component of nurse education.
95  severe physical aggression was unrelated to nurses' emotions.
96   An improved understanding of links between nurses' exposure to aggression, attitudes to, and actual
97 unds, such as from the community and skilled-nursing facilities (SNFs), and at various risks for resi
98 outine office settings, and those in skilled nursing facilities.
99 s and treatment uptake, whereas support from nurses, family, and friends was a facilitator for treatm
100 ing the end-of-life decision-making process, nurses' feelings toward their patients and physicians' f
101                                          The nurse group was offered three PA consultations.
102 I, 5.9-17.4] when family present), whether a nurse had less than 1 year of experience (4.4 minutes [9
103 te information exchange between patients and nurses has not been explored in ward contexts.
104                        Although rheumatology nursing has been shown to be effective in managing patie
105 2010-2012), conducted among subgroups of the Nurses' Health Studies.
106   The authors included 76,364 women from the Nurses' Health Study (1980 to 2012), 92,946 women from t
107                   We collected data from the Nurses' Health Study (1984-2012) and Health Professional
108  data from 2 prospective cohort studies, the Nurses' Health Study (1988-2012; n = 78,516) and Nurses'
109            We used prospective data from the Nurses' Health Study (n = 70,021).
110  intake.We evaluated associations within the Nurses' Health Study (NHS) (n = 88,598) and the Health P
111 itis (AD) in a large cohort of US women, the Nurses' Health Study 2.
112 and eight hundred eighty-nine women from the Nurses' Health Study and 38,961 men from Health Professi
113                 In an analysis data from the Nurses' Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up
114              In an analysis of data from the Nurses' Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow
115 es' Health Study (1988-2012; n = 78,516) and Nurses' Health Study II (1989-2013; n = 114,559), we exa
116  Study (1980 to 2012), 92,946 women from the Nurses' Health Study II (1991 to 2013), and 41,526 men f
117                We included 95,809 women from Nurses' Health Study II (1991-2005).
118 risk factors from 13,864 participants in the Nurses' Health Study II who had completed a self-adminis
119 ts in the NHS (Nurses' Health Study), NHSII (Nurses' Health Study II), and Health Professionals Follo
120              In an analysis of data from the Nurses' Health Study II, we did not observe a convincing
121 weeks) and CVD in 70 182 parous women in the Nurses' Health Study II.
122 n (mean age, 65 +/- 7 years) enrolled in the Nurses' Health Study since 2000 and 28,989 men (mean age
123 ded 52,135 women (mean age: 44.2 y) from the Nurses' Health Study without chronic diseases in 1980 an
124 ion Study that was conducted within the NHS (Nurses' Health Study) and NHS II longitudinal cohorts.
125 e collected in 3168 participants in the NHS (Nurses' Health Study), NHSII (Nurses' Health Study II),
126  from Europe (ESTHER) and the United States (Nurses' Health Study).
127 and three hundred and sixty-two women in the Nurses' Health Study, free of CHD and stroke at baseline
128                                       In the Nurses' Health Study, women with 30 years or more of shi
129 risk of FI among postmenopausal women in the Nurses' Health Study.
130 ere associated with risks of brain damage or nursing home admission and of death from any cause that
131 16.8% (P<0.001), the rate of brain damage or nursing home admission decreased from 10.0% to 7.6% (P<0
132 as associated with a risk of brain damage or nursing home admission that was significantly lower than
133  of the composite end point of brain damage, nursing home admission, or death (hazard ratio, 0.67; 95
134 le estimates of the lifetime risk of using a nursing home and the associated out-of-pocket costs are
135 mates, at least partly due to an increase in nursing home episodes of short duration.
136 nderstood, with residents with dementia in a nursing home often viewed as asexual or incapable of bei
137 respiratory-related hospital admissions from nursing home residents aged 65 years and older.
138 he effect on reducing hospital admissions of nursing home residents in the USA.
139                                              Nursing home residents with dementia experience increase
140 dent interactions during care activities for nursing home residents with dementia.
141 inuing inappropriate medication use in frail nursing home residents without a decline in their well-b
142 sponses in managing sexual expression in the nursing home setting.
143 y held (personhood versus biomedical model), nursing home staff adopted a role or a combination of ro
144 esentations of sexuality in dementia held by nursing home staff ranged from the perception that sexua
145                We used data on up to 18 y of nursing home use and out-of-pocket costs drawn from the
146 , we estimated a dynamic parametric model of nursing home use and spending.
147                                     59 Dutch nursing home wards for long-term care.
148  of women and up to 77% of women residing in nursing homes have urinary incontinence, yet only 25% se
149                           Medicare-certified nursing homes in the USA located within 50 miles of a Ce
150 hat the percentage of people ever staying in nursing homes is substantially higher than previous esti
151 tified nursing assistants (mean age=36) in 8 nursing homes.
152  arrangements for residents with dementia in nursing homes.
153 inary panel of medical oncology, psychiatry, nursing, hospice and palliative medicine, communication
154 tative exploratory study was used to explore nurse identified sources, barriers to addressing, and co
155 e that the burden of work for physicians and nurses in general practice associated with newly diagnos
156  of intensive care unit (ICU) physicians and nurses in predicting 6-month patient mortality and morbi
157 mmendations to effectively deploy registered nurses in primary care needed to assure efficient, evide
158 ehind, information exchanged by patients and nurses in surgical and medical ward settings using a rec
159 resence and proliferation of vascular access nursing in hospital settings has been identified as a po
160 ntly less oligosaccharides compared to those nursing in the dry season (November to June).
161                                      Mothers nursing in the wet season (July to October) produced sig
162 even electronic databases, including British Nursing Index, MEDLINE, CINAHL, AMED, EMBASE, Cochrane L
163                          Three hundred three nurses, intensivists, and advanced practice providers.
164 on-making do not adequately fit with patient/nurse interactions in ward settings.
165           Due to the complexities of patient/nurse interactions, consideration should be given to sit
166 t of outcomes to be used in all rheumatology nursing intervention studies.
167 oid arthritis, patient outcomes sensitive to nursing interventions (nursing sensitive outcomes) have
168 t outcomes measured in studies that reported nursing interventions in patients with rheumatoid arthri
169 cial skills and nurse-patient interaction of nurses is an area in nursing that requires further studi
170                          Fatigue in hospital nurses is associated with decreased nurse satisfaction,
171                                              Nurses' knowledge improved significantly immediately aft
172 pothesized outcomes included improvements in nurses' knowledge, attitudes, and assessment practices,
173 gies to change practice can lead to improved nurses' knowledge, quality of care, and patient outcomes
174         To study male-female earnings in the nursing labor market in Germany.
175                                     Although nurse-led chemotherapy clinics have been set up to addre
176 cused ethnographic study of nurses' roles in nurse-led chemotherapy clinics, including semi-structure
177 t geographical areas within the UK operating nurse-led chemotherapy clinics.
178 tify randomized controlled studies comparing nurse-led self-management interventions to usual care Se
179                                         Some nurse-led self-management programmes in this systematic
180                 The review demonstrated that nurse-led self-management programmes may be associated w
181 s naive) and included block randomisation at nurse level with randomly ordered blocks of size four, s
182 cance has not received much attention in the nursing literature.
183 t participation in handover include training nurses, making handovers predictable for patients and in
184 tuations where connectivity exists without a nursing mechanism, and the biological meaning of such co
185 pre-registration adult, child, mental health nursing, midwifery and paramedic practice students.
186 t gap and explores the experience of student nurses (n=12) and physiotherapists (n=6) throughout thei
187 udies were completed by physicians (n=16) or nurses (n=15).
188 -patient consultations were observed with 13 nurses; of these 13, interviews were conducted with 11 n
189 of parenting support programmes delivered by nurses on a range of health outcomes; and for the impact
190  existing research evidence on the impact of nursing on patient outcomes, identify gaps in evidence,
191 , anesthetists, an ERAS coordinator (often a nurse or a physician assistant), and staff from units th
192 elling, the visible healthy lifestyle of the nurse or that nurses are more willing to promote the hea
193  type 2 diabetes receive dietary advice from nurses or doctors instead of individualized nutrition th
194 Scale of the Nursing Work Index and patient, nurse, or organizational outcomes.
195            A better understanding of whether nurses' own smoking behaviours influence their engagemen
196 ed each nurse-patient dyad and completed the Nurse-Patient Bonding Instrument.
197                                           61 nurse-patient consultations were observed with 13 nurses
198     Three trained team members observed each nurse-patient dyad and completed the Nurse-Patient Bondi
199  using social media on the social skills and nurse-patient interaction of nurses and emphasizes the n
200 of social media use on the social skills and nurse-patient interaction of nurses is an area in nursin
201                                 Patients and nurses perceived they had exchanged sufficient informati
202          Segregated synthesis of research of nurses' perceptions included three categories: viewing t
203 ients who received care within an integrated nurse/pharmacist adherence support program.
204                                         Poor nurse-physician collaboration predicted perception of no
205 ntions that improve the environment in which nurses practice and determining if changing the environm
206 ty reported significant findings between the nursing practice environment and outcomes.
207 comes except for medical ICU length of stay (nurse practitioner-resident-staffed 7.9 +/- 7.5 d vs res
208  To compare usage patterns and outcomes of a nurse practitioner-staffed medical ICU and a resident-st
209                     Patients admitted to the nurse practitioner-staffed medical ICU were older (63 +/
210                 The effective utilization of nurse practitioners (NPs) has been proposed as a solutio
211 uded residents (n = 9), fellows (n = 4), and nurse practitioners or physician assistants (n = 2).
212 15, by 84 health care providers (physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants) from across t
213 hemotherapy nurses and those run by advanced nurse practitioners.
214  from this study further support the role of nursing professional culture as an important barrier to
215 and behaviors define the specific aspects of nursing professional culture that can act as barriers to
216                   A new construct related to nursing professional culture was identified and defined
217  were randomly assigned to the Pain Resource Nurse program (n=12) or to wait list control (n=11).
218                            The Pain Resource Nurse program is a widely disseminated, evidence-based,
219                            The Pain Resource Nurse program was successful in improving nurses' use of
220  test the effectiveness of the Pain Resource Nurse program.
221  across the three years of the undergraduate nursing program.
222             For each outcome, physicians and nurses provided a dichotomous prediction and rated their
223      Non-native speakers of English who hold nursing qualifications from outside the UK are required
224 ked all their questions; therapeutic patient/nurse relationships; and, nurses speaking in lay terms.
225                                              Nurses' reported anger was significantly positively corr
226                                              Nurse-reported anger predicted approval of coercive viol
227 arch articles published in three high-impact nursing research journals in 2016 was undertaken.
228 icance should be an important priority among nurse researchers.
229  were used to collect data from patients and nurses respectively.
230 standing the organisational component of the nursing role for educational, practice and research purp
231 ck of knowledge about effective primary care nursing roles and responsibilities challenges policy mak
232 h needs to address how implementing expanded nursing roles and task shifting impacts on the morale, r
233              A focused ethnographic study of nurses' roles in nurse-led chemotherapy clinics, includi
234            The use of a medical assistant or nurse's aide to perform non-nursing tasks allows registe
235              Each hour that elapsed during a nurse's shift was associated with a 15% longer response
236                             An increase in a nurse's workload by one patient and a 10% increase in th
237 hospital nurses is associated with decreased nurse satisfaction, increased turnover and negative pati
238 nal year nursing students (N=256) from eight nursing schools.
239                                              Nursing science might benefit from deeper involvement in
240                                              Nurses screened all outpatients and inpatients at all he
241 outcomes sensitive to nursing interventions (nursing sensitive outcomes) have not been systematically
242 language, and (vi) quantitative studies with nursing sensitive outcomes.
243     The assertion in health care policy that nurses should be role models for healthy behaviours assu
244       Studies were included if they reported nurses' smoking cessation practices in relation to their
245 herapeutic patient/nurse relationships; and, nurses speaking in lay terms.
246 should expand on emerging payment models for nurse-specific tasks.
247 were conducted with 22 purposively recruited nursing staff (17 registered nurses; 5 nursing assistant
248 length of day shift affected patient care or nursing staff communication with patients and families.
249 am is a widely disseminated, evidence-based, nursing staff development program, designed to improve p
250                                              Nursing staff held varied views about the effects of day
251               Twenty hours of observation of nursing staff's interactions with patients and families
252 ar evidence that Care Co-ordinators (largely nursing staff) using an oral health checklist improves o
253 iation analysis shows an association between nurse staffing and missed care and a subsequent associat
254 mediates the relationship between registered nurse staffing and risk of patient mortality.
255 en associated with differences in registered nurse staffing levels.
256 sed nursing care, which is highly related to nurse staffing, is associated with increased odds of pat
257 higher nursing workload, and more one-to-one nurse staffing.
258 ered nurses, to examine associations between nurses' staffing, missed care and 30-day in-patient mort
259             Despite the inherent challenges, nurses strive towards doing their utmost for patients an
260 rrelational multi-centre study of final year nursing students (N=256) from eight nursing schools.
261                                   Final year nursing students are actually not ready to support patie
262 nvironments for patients, it is crucial that nursing students develop confidence communicating with o
263 was rated significantly higher by third year nursing students than by first and second year students.
264 ere rated significantly higher by first year nursing students than by second and third year students.
265 cond and third year Australian undergraduate nursing students' confidence in patient safety knowledge
266                   Furthermore, mothers whose nursing style required greater effort by puppies were mo
267  successful offspring, whereas mothers whose nursing style required less effort were more likely to p
268 mple included 600 hospitals linked to 27,009 nurse survey respondents and 852,974 surgical patients.
269 cal assistant or nurse's aide to perform non-nursing tasks allows registered nurses to take on more c
270  and limited upward job mobility in Germany, nurses tend to be more homogenous in their motivation to
271 -patient interaction of nurses is an area in nursing that requires further studies.
272 vironment in which de-escalation occurs, and nursing the disciplinary group most commonly discussed.
273                  Although clinics are run by nurses they are often controlled by medical consultants,
274 for patients and involving both patients and nurses throughout the change process.
275 e largest contributors to cost were clinical nurse time for repositioning and skin inspection.
276                                          The nurse to patient ratio and physical and mental fatigue (
277                 Bedside monitor alarms alert nurses to life-threatening physiologic changes among pat
278  perform non-nursing tasks allows registered nurses to take on more complex patient care.
279 ies, with survey data from 26,516 registered nurses, to examine associations between nurses' staffing
280 factors that likely represent the heuristics nurses use to assess whether an alarm represents a life-
281 ce Nurse program was successful in improving nurses' use of standardized measures for pain assessment
282                                              Nurses used the 5-item, 7-point Little Schmidy to assess
283 components, and considers its application to nursing using ethnographic research on the organising wo
284  number of nonactionable alarms to which the nurse was exposed in the preceding 120 minutes was not a
285      The adjusted median response time among nurses was 10.4 minutes (95% CI, 5.0-15.8) and varied ba
286         In the tracking study, each of the 4 nurses was interviewed on four occasions, outside the wo
287 ll clinicians other than the DBS programming nurse were masked to the choice of lead.
288  pain in a population of military registered nurses when controlling for relevant risk factors.
289 itivities (95% CI) for the two critical care nurses when using the Arabic CAM-ICU compared with the r
290                                            A nurse who acquired Lassa virus infection in Togo in the
291                     The second patient was a nurse who became infected while caring for the index pat
292  of delirium was assessed daily by 2 trained nurses who were masked to intervention status by using t
293 t and able to participate; and b) registered nurses who worked on the participating units.
294 4-5.5] vs 8.8 minutes [95% CI, 7.2-10.5] for nurses with 1 or more years of experience), if there was
295        To improve patient-centered care, the nurse work environment and the level of implicit rationi
296 ventions should be directed toward improving nurse work environments.
297 etween the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index and patient, nurse, or organizational
298 rch terms, Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index and PES-NWI.
299 barrier to effectively addressing fatigue in nursing work systems.
300 rom the same hospital units, 1810 registered nurses working in direct patient care were also included
301  or more preweaning sedative classes, higher nursing workload, and more one-to-one nurse staffing.

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