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1 Internet of things is yet vaguely adopted in nursing.
2 cated to identify all literature relevant to nursing.
3 3 of their nurses had a bachelor's degree in nursing.
4 rengthen the evidence base for the impact of nursing?
5  PubMed, EMBASE, and the Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature were searched to iden
6 ar (180 adult, 33 child and 34 mental health nursing and 34 paramedic practice students).
7 ase Dialog, Embase Ovid, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) EBSCO, Glo
8 a Database (EMBASE), the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL+), the Heal
9  PubMed, Web of Science, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature and Cochrane Librar
10 e of Systematic Reviews, EMBASE, and Current Nursing and Allied Health Literature from January 1, 201
11 ses (PubMed, Embase, and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature) between January 1,
12 Med, Embase, and CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature) included all rando
13 ience, Embase, Ovid, and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and included all s
14 Medline, Embase, Scopus, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Cochrane Central R
15 as carried out using the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Dentistry and Oral
16 ollected through PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Educational Resour
17 erence Papers Index, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Excerpta Medica Da
18  of systematic reviews), Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature, PsychINFO, PsychAR
19 ealth, Cochrane Library, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Scopus, and Medlin
20 , Global Health, Embase, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Web of Knowledge,
21 urce Information Center, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Web of Science, Ps
22 nducted in the databases Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health, PubMed and PsycInfo for artic
23                                     Multiple nursing and healthcare databases were searched using rel
24 criteria included nurses registered with the Nursing and Midwifery Council, and patients who had been
25 d the factors that influence disadvantage in nursing and other professions such as physiotherapy.
26 eptember 2015 adult; Child and Mental Health Nursing and Paramedic Practice programmes.
27 s study focuses on a program of standardized nursing and physical therapy interventions to prevent de
28               The triple group required more nursing and practitioner attention due to increased anxi
29 ery rely on PAC facilities including skilled nursing and rehabilitation centers to help them recover
30 cute care (PAC) facilities including skilled nursing and rehabilitation.
31  earnings for nurses who no longer worked in nursing and testing potential differences in motivation
32 es to HHC (eg, visiting or private-duty home nursing) and PAC (eg, rehabilitation facility) were iden
33                 Obesity complicates medical, nursing, and informal care in severe illness, but its ef
34 surgery, radiation therapy, palliative care, nursing, and pathology, along with patient representativ
35 ce use data (e.g., hospitalizations, skilled nursing, and rehabilitation facility stays) were collect
36 h patient safety risks arise within hospital nursing, and suggest that nurses may not respond to staf
37  years of experience), if there was a 1 to 1 nursing assignment (3.5 minutes [95% CI, 1.3-5.7] vs 10.
38 ith dementia (mean age=86), and 19 certified nursing assistants (mean age=36) in 8 nursing homes.
39 uited nursing staff (17 registered nurses; 5 nursing assistants).
40 troduce the concept of Internet of Things to nursing audience by exploring the state of the art of In
41       Our results suggest that both maternal nursing behavior and individual traits of cognition and
42 e observation period was not measured during nursing behaviour.
43 e iron homeostasis at 10 d of age when fully nursing, but such capacity occurred at 20 d of age when
44 ssel characteristics, surgeon experience, or nursing cannulation skill.
45 esearch (p < 0.01) and impact of research on nursing care (p < 0.01).
46 e identified in several topics in four basic nursing care activities: comprehensive assessment, perio
47 s providing innovations for the use of basic nursing care although the innovations are emerging and s
48 ve association between implicit rationing of nursing care and patient-centered care: i.e.the lower th
49                                              Nursing care and research should focus more on adolescen
50  patient education may promote best practice nursing care but may not be cost-effective in preventing
51 ousing children in grades kindergarten-12, a nursing care facility, and an apartment complex.
52 ss of interventions to support compassionate nursing care has been reported, no rigorous critical ove
53 t study aims to understand the views held by nursing care home staff towards dementia and sexuality a
54 gs based innovations and the themes of basic nursing care in hospital environment were identified.
55 ings technology can be used to promote basic nursing care in the hospital environment by improving th
56 nternet of Things based technology for basic nursing care in the hospital environment.
57                                       Missed nursing care may be a significant predictor of patient m
58                       AIM: Examine if missed nursing care mediates the observed association between n
59  analyses support the hypothesis that missed nursing care mediates the relationship between registere
60      Health status, individualized care, and nursing care quality were found to be associated with tr
61      They are also viewed as an indicator of nursing care quality.
62 nment and the level of implicit rationing of nursing care should be taken into consideration.
63  and a 10% increase in the percent of missed nursing care were associated with a 7% (OR 1.068, 95% CI
64 more, higher levels of implicit rationing of nursing care were associated with lower levels of patien
65                    Nurse staffing and missed nursing care were significantly associated with 30-day c
66 contact, nursing care, direct contact but no nursing care).
67 on-analgesia quality for each 12 h period of nursing care, and sedation-related adverse events daily.
68 exposure (direct contact, no direct contact, nursing care, direct contact but no nursing care).
69 anagement by an AD specialist, education and nursing care, psychological and behavioral support, and
70 the lower the level of implicit rationing of nursing care, the better patients understood nurses, fel
71                                       Missed nursing care, which is highly related to nurse staffing,
72 o a higher incidence of necessary but missed nursing care.
73 se work environment or implicit rationing of nursing care.
74 nvironment factors and implicit rationing of nursing care.
75 p ability and level of implicit rationing of nursing care.
76 istered nurses to ensure safe, and effective nursing care.
77                        Medline, CINAHL, Ovid nursing, Cochrane library and PsycINFO databases were se
78  with patients, family members, doctors, and nursing colleagues.
79            A total of 368 students from four nursing colleges in South Korea participated.
80 ess two questions: what is the evidence that nursing contributes to improving the health and well-bei
81 ttings (classroom and clinical), and year of nursing course.
82                                              Nursing curricula should be further attuned to the compl
83 tabase, Ovid HealthSTAR, Global Health, Ovid Nursing Database, Web of Science, CINAHL Plus, ProQuest
84 nt delirium in the ICU, called UNDERPIN-ICU (nUrsiNg DEliRium Preventive INterventions in the ICU).
85 ealthcare professionals and educators within nursing education because of their presumed capacity to
86 tinue being used to inform best practices in nursing education, they must be rigorous in design.
87 es reporting the use of consensus methods in nursing education.
88 sociated with less favorable attitudes about nursing engagement in research (p < 0.01) and impact of
89 ion reported more favorable attitudes toward nursing engagement in research (p < 0.01) and research a
90 milar costs) compared with hospitals without nursing environment recognition and with below-average s
91  Focal vs control hospitals (better vs worse nursing environment).
92                        Hospitals with better nursing environments and above-average staffing levels w
93 ked, additional education obtained, years of nursing experience, years of labor market experience, ca
94 unds, such as from the community and skilled-nursing facilities (SNFs), and at various risks for resi
95  by rehabilitation provided at home, skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), or acute inpatient facilities
96 e discharges (comparing discharge to skilled nursing facilities vs home with/without home health serv
97 outine office settings, and those in skilled nursing facilities.
98 95% CI, 1.01-1.34), and discharge to skilled nursing facility (HR, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.01-1.34) were inde
99 alysis, only hospital ownership of a skilled nursing facility (P < 0.001), teaching status (P = 0.025
100 oefficient = 0.01) or discharge to a skilled nursing facility (Pearson correlation coefficient = 0.05
101  hospitalization, and admission to a skilled nursing facility (SNF) were assessed over 2 years in age
102              Hospital ownership of a skilled nursing facility and low nurse-to-patient ratios are hig
103  adverse discharge disposition (discharge to nursing facility or in-hospital mortality, odds ratio 7.
104 rience elevated risks of chronic illness and nursing facility placement.
105 npatient, ambulatory, retail pharmaceutical, nursing facility, emergency department, and dental care
106 bservation status, or discharge to a skilled nursing facility.
107 rganising work is a neglected element of the nursing function and lacks theoretical foundations.
108                          Numerous reviews of nursing handover have been undertaken, but none have foc
109                        Although rheumatology nursing has been shown to be effective in managing patie
110  1.49 [CI, 1.24 to 1.80]) and diagnosis in a nursing home (2.1% vs. 0.6%; aOR, 1.99 [CI, 1.34 to 2.93
111 e interval [CI], 3.60-16.51), discharge to a nursing home (mOR, 2.65; 95% CI, 1.41-4.99), presence of
112 d the 1-year risks of anoxic brain damage or nursing home admission and of death from any cause among
113 ere associated with risks of brain damage or nursing home admission and of death from any cause that
114 16.8% (P<0.001), the rate of brain damage or nursing home admission decreased from 10.0% to 7.6% (P<0
115 as associated with a risk of brain damage or nursing home admission that was significantly lower than
116  of the composite end point of brain damage, nursing home admission, or death (hazard ratio, 0.67; 95
117 10.5% had brain damage or were admitted to a nursing home and 9.7% died during the 1-year follow-up p
118 rolled efficacy trial with stratification by nursing home and involving 185 English-speaking women ag
119 le estimates of the lifetime risk of using a nursing home and the associated out-of-pocket costs are
120 ational research for the association between nursing home care quality and for-profit ownership.
121                 This trend is referred to as nursing home culture change in the U.S.
122 aged 57-61 will stay at least one night in a nursing home during their lifetimes, but only 32% of the
123 e in increasing serum zinc concentrations in nursing home elderly; however, not all zinc-deficient el
124 mates, at least partly due to an increase in nursing home episodes of short duration.
125 ittle is known about whether the Green House nursing home model has positive effects on physical func
126 nderstood, with residents with dementia in a nursing home often viewed as asexual or incapable of bei
127 ive disabilities, frailty, or residence in a nursing home or assisted living facility.
128 ently associated with longer hospital stays, nursing home placement, and death in patients outside th
129                        Prior antibiotic use, nursing home residence, and transfer from an outside hos
130                     Along with older age and nursing home residence, cancer and chemotherapy strongly
131                               A total of 426 nursing home residents (233 in the intervention group an
132                      We examined 187 elderly nursing home residents (aged 80-102 years) and 50 commun
133 respiratory-related hospital admissions from nursing home residents aged 65 years and older.
134                        A cohort of 190 frail nursing home residents aged 80-102 years and a cohort of
135 he effect on reducing hospital admissions of nursing home residents in the USA.
136 eline was significantly lower in the elderly nursing home residents than in the community-dwelling se
137 ella vaccine induces VZV immunity in elderly nursing home residents that is similar to that produced
138                                              Nursing home residents with dementia experience increase
139 tal stimulation and eating performance among nursing home residents with dementia.
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 scribing is a well-known clinical problem in nursing home residents, but few interventions have focus
143      Upon further examination of the elderly nursing home residents, we found that higher frequencies
144 medication use and to improve prescribing in nursing home residents.
145 llance and antibiotic treatment data for 234 nursing home residents.
146 proving care quality and quality of life for nursing home residents.
147 sponses in managing sexual expression in the nursing home setting.
148 y held (personhood versus biomedical model), nursing home staff adopted a role or a combination of ro
149 esentations of sexuality in dementia held by nursing home staff ranged from the perception that sexua
150                                              Nursing home staff's responses varied depending on the s
151                We used data on up to 18 y of nursing home use and out-of-pocket costs drawn from the
152 , we estimated a dynamic parametric model of nursing home use and spending.
153                                     59 Dutch nursing home wards for long-term care.
154 were admission from chronic care facility or nursing home, dependent functional status, and higher Am
155 hort-stay acute care hospitals (ACHs), and 6 nursing homes (NHs).
156  of women and up to 77% of women residing in nursing homes have urinary incontinence, yet only 25% se
157 cted with eight staff members working in two nursing homes in Greater London, United Kingdom.
158                           Medicare-certified nursing homes in the USA located within 50 miles of a Ce
159                                     R-REM in nursing homes is highly prevalent.
160 hat the percentage of people ever staying in nursing homes is substantially higher than previous esti
161 uria plus pyuria at baseline, residing in 21 nursing homes located within 50 miles (80 km) of New Hav
162 ne (hereafter, "varicella vaccine") in frail nursing homes residents nor about immune phenotypes asso
163                                     Enrolled nursing homes were randomised to a facility-wide standar
164 reduce agitation in persons with dementia in nursing homes.
165  arrangements for residents with dementia in nursing homes.
166 on physical function compared to traditional nursing homes.
167 tified nursing assistants (mean age=36) in 8 nursing homes.
168 inary panel of medical oncology, psychiatry, nursing, hospice and palliative medicine, communication
169  citations to reveal clusters of evidence of nursing impact in clinical areas which had been subject
170 althcare in the following areas of practice: nursing in acute care settings; nurses' involvement in p
171 resence and proliferation of vascular access nursing in hospital settings has been identified as a po
172 ntly less oligosaccharides compared to those nursing in the dry season (November to June).
173 e required to deal with the daily demands of nursing in the UK.
174                                      Mothers nursing in the wet season (July to October) produced sig
175  published studies (CINAHL, MEDLINE, British Nursing Index, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled T
176 even electronic databases, including British Nursing Index, MEDLINE, CINAHL, AMED, EMBASE, Cochrane L
177 arger litters tended to have higher Tb while nursing inside nests (P < 0.05), suggesting that nursing
178 t of outcomes to be used in all rheumatology nursing intervention studies.
179 oid arthritis, patient outcomes sensitive to nursing interventions (nursing sensitive outcomes) have
180 ses using the key words: nursing, nurse led, nursing interventions and patient outcomes.
181 t outcomes measured in studies that reported nursing interventions in patients with rheumatoid arthri
182 ional outcome measures that are sensitive to nursing interventions in rheumatology specifically.
183                                              Nursing involves caring for the 'whole person' and it is
184                                              Nursing is an integral part of all healthcare services,
185                                              Nursing is one of the largest occupations for women in e
186         To study male-female earnings in the nursing labor market in Germany.
187 ovide recommendations that may be helpful to nursing leaders and researchers who plan to use this ins
188 cted from the California Board of Registered Nursing list.
189 in clinical significance have penetrated the nursing literature.
190 cance has not received much attention in the nursing literature.
191 tuations where connectivity exists without a nursing mechanism, and the biological meaning of such co
192 pre-registration adult, child, mental health nursing, midwifery and paramedic practice students.
193 eriod until day 14, the piglet breed and the nursing mother lead to increasing differentiation of the
194 NICE evidence databases using the key words: nursing, nurse led, nursing interventions and patient ou
195 ing inside nests (P < 0.05), suggesting that nursing offspring may have influenced heat retention.
196  existing research evidence on the impact of nursing on patient outcomes, identify gaps in evidence,
197 of registered nurses with a baccalaureate in nursing or higher degree, higher percent of registered n
198 cross arthropod societies, sib-rearing (e.g. nursing or nest defence) may be provided by females, by
199                               A total of 370 nursing overtime hours were required to treat the injure
200               Medical records, imaging data, nursing overtime, blood bank records, and trauma registr
201 ated in the pup thymus and spleen during the nursing period.
202 ing the patients' dentures should be part of nursing personnel's daily care routine for every patient
203       Ten papers were included, representing nursing, pharmacy and medicine from UK, Norway and USA.
204                 Clear practice protocols and nursing policy should be written by registered nurses to
205 ES-NWI) is an instrument, which measures the nursing practice environment - defined as factors that e
206 ty reported significant findings between the nursing practice environment and outcomes.
207 t delirium epidemiology, systems of care and nursing practice in palliative care units.
208 stigating delirium epidemiology, systems and nursing practice in palliative care units.
209 ood and thought to lack relevance to bedside nursing practice.
210 ave a defensible resource (i.e. females) and nursing/pregnant females are likely motivated to drive o
211  from this study further support the role of nursing professional culture as an important barrier to
212 and behaviors define the specific aspects of nursing professional culture that can act as barriers to
213                   A new construct related to nursing professional culture was identified and defined
214 ionships among nurse perceptions of fatigue, nursing professional culture, and implications for the n
215 reasing and improving the role of health and nursing professionals to reduce burden and rehabilitatio
216  across the three years of the undergraduate nursing program.
217                             A rehabilitation nursing programme included gait, balance, functional tra
218 s study demonstrated that the rehabilitation nursing programme was effective in improving balance and
219  Hanson method should no longer be taught in nursing programs or used in practice by the nurse.
220      Non-native speakers of English who hold nursing qualifications from outside the UK are required
221     All participants were beneficiaries of a nursing quality improvement campaign in infant safe slee
222                The independent effect of the nursing quality improvement intervention was not signifi
223 rns, a mobile health intervention, but not a nursing quality improvement intervention, improved adher
224 ls participating in the National Database of Nursing Quality Indictors((R)) during the year 2013.
225 ddition to linguistic knowledge and fluency, nursing requires considerable cultural and pragmatic kno
226 arch articles published in three high-impact nursing research journals in 2016 was undertaken.
227 his needs to be addressed urgently to enable nursing research to increase the impact that it has on h
228 standing the organisational component of the nursing role for educational, practice and research purp
229 are teams yet there is a wide variability in nursing roles and responsibilities across organizations.
230 ck of knowledge about effective primary care nursing roles and responsibilities challenges policy mak
231 pite a rapid expansion in the development of nursing roles and responsibilities in oncology, there is
232 ssional teams; (2) description of registered nursing roles and responsibilities; (3) primary care set
233 h needs to address how implementing expanded nursing roles and task shifting impacts on the morale, r
234 recruited from a convenience sample of eight nursing schools.
235 nal year nursing students (N=256) from eight nursing schools.
236                                              Nursing science might benefit from deeper involvement in
237 ity and salience of clinical significance in nursing science.
238                                      Data on nursing sensitive outcomes were extracted independently
239                                    Seventeen nursing sensitive outcomes were identified (disease acti
240 outcomes sensitive to nursing interventions (nursing sensitive outcomes) have not been systematically
241 language, and (vi) quantitative studies with nursing sensitive outcomes.
242 se for greater investment and development of nursing services around the world.
243 ants were recruited from acute and community nursing services in two locations in the North of Englan
244      To explore how patient participation in nursing shift-to-shift bedside handover can be enacted.
245 e or attenuate a nurse's ability to practice nursing skillfully and deliver high quality care.
246 a associated with breed, and others with the nursing sow most likely due to its milk composition.
247 General descriptors such as type of journal, nursing speciality, type of educational issue addressed,
248 were conducted with 22 purposively recruited nursing staff (17 registered nurses; 5 nursing assistant
249                    Dressings were applied by nursing staff (or by instructed relatives for some outpa
250                                      Bedside nursing staff administered dexmedetomidine (or placebo)
251 affects the quality of communication between nursing staff and patients/families on older people's wa
252                                              Nursing staff believed that tiredness could affect care
253 length of day shift affected patient care or nursing staff communication with patients and families.
254 am is a widely disseminated, evidence-based, nursing staff development program, designed to improve p
255 les (nurse work environment, nurse staffing, nursing staff education and experience, lactation consul
256                                              Nursing staff held varied views about the effects of day
257                                     Clinical nursing staff in all 39 ICUs were able to record sleep a
258                                     Research nursing staff were aware of group allocation, but alloca
259               Twenty hours of observation of nursing staff's interactions with patients and families
260 ar evidence that Care Co-ordinators (largely nursing staff) using an oral health checklist improves o
261                                          2a) Nursing staff, employed mealtime assistants, volunteers
262 assistants and practitioners, and ophthalmic nursing staff.
263 rrelational multi-centre study of final year nursing students (N=256) from eight nursing schools.
264                                   Final year nursing students (N=256) reported an overall low level o
265                                   Final year nursing students are actually not ready to support patie
266 nvironments for patients, it is crucial that nursing students develop confidence communicating with o
267 was rated significantly higher by third year nursing students than by first and second year students.
268 ere rated significantly higher by first year nursing students than by second and third year students.
269 cond and third year Australian undergraduate nursing students' confidence in patient safety knowledge
270  To date, there is no evidence on final year nursing students' performance in supporting patients' se
271 ting patients' self-management by final year nursing students, and person-related factors associated
272     A total of 1319 Australian undergraduate nursing students.
273                   Furthermore, mothers whose nursing style required greater effort by puppies were mo
274  successful offspring, whereas mothers whose nursing style required less effort were more likely to p
275 cal assistant or nurse's aide to perform non-nursing tasks allows registered nurses to take on more c
276                                   Supporting nursing teams in team reflection after them having recei
277  better understand the impact of feedback to nursing teams on quality measurements, we should take nu
278 , while our data also provides evidence that nursing teams using the feedback to jointly reflect and
279 -patient interaction of nurses is an area in nursing that requires further studies.
280 vironment in which de-escalation occurs, and nursing the disciplinary group most commonly discussed.
281 intervals, the antiseptic agent used on each nursing unit was switched.
282                                        Eight nursing units at RWJUH were provided with blood culture
283 otal BC sets obtained from the participating nursing units, 667 (10.94%) were positive and 238 (3.90%
284 ations (48% arrhythmia/hemodynamic) among 61 nursing units.
285 components, and considers its application to nursing using ethnographic research on the organising wo
286 action of nurses with a bachelor's degree in nursing was associated with a three percentage point inc
287                           However, Tb during nursing was not higher than that recorded during other b
288                                          For nursing women, breastfeeding gave protection against bre
289 terature suggests that hospitals with better nursing work environments provide better quality of care
290        The Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index (PES-NWI) is an instrument, which mea
291 etween the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index and patient, nurse, or organizational
292 rch terms, Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index and PES-NWI.
293 25) in the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index composite score was associated with a
294 iew of the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index's use to date and provide recommendat
295 barrier to effectively addressing fatigue in nursing work systems.
296       Provider-related factor subthemes were nursing workforce related ("nurse attrition," "inexperie
297 th a culture of patient safety and a healthy nursing workforce.
298 ofessional culture, and implications for the nursing workforce.
299 ss overweight and obesity among the Scottish nursing workforce.
300 dings, and investigation of research-related nursing workload are warranted.
301  or more preweaning sedative classes, higher nursing workload, and more one-to-one nurse staffing.

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