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1 tate current debates about empathy's role in nursing.
2 n of total isolation of patients and barrier nursing.
3 the place of these phenomena in the field of nursing.
4  fruitful debate over the role of empathy in nursing.
5 e used for activity based cost accounting in nursing.
6 d close proximity (ie, touching, feeding, or nursing a NiV-infected person), enabling exposure to dro
7         Tweetable abstract 12-hour shifts in nursing: a mix of short and long shifts may be worse tha
8           Results Nearly 60% of the observed nursing activities did not fit into categories readily a
9 er nurse ratio greater than 61 for both mean Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nurs
10 er nurse ratio greater than 41 for both mean Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nurs
11                                              Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio greater than 41
12 ase-mix adjustment the association between a Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio greater than 61
13  Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio on day 1 and in
14  Activities Score per nurse ratio as well as Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio on day 1 were a
15                                     A higher Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio was associated
16 f mean or day 1 patients per nurse ratio and Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio with in-hospita
17       We investigated the association of the Nursing Activities Score per nurse ratio, respectively,
18 ing time can be quantified by tools like the Nursing Activities Score.
19  skilled nursing or unskilled nursing (e.g., nursing aide for activities of daily living) care.
20 tem Online (MEDLINE) and Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) were searc
21 ), The Cochrane Library, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and PsycI
22  conducted using PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Anthropol
23 ished on PubMed, Scopus, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Embase, a
24 edica Database), CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature), MEDLINE, Scopus,
25 bases (PsycINFO, PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and Global Health)
26 library, Web of Science, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and Latin American
27 re from Medline, Embase, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and the Cochrane L
28 l care, represented by decreased arched-back nursing and increased frequency of exits from the nest.
29 ves (odds ratio 5.80 [95% CI 3.91-8.61]) and nursing and medical assistants (2.65 [1.67-4.20]) signif
30 nurses and midwives (10.06 [6.68-15.13]) and nursing and medical assistants (5.93 [4.05-8.71]) also s
31 sociated with career progression with men in nursing, and the rate limiting factors with the female w
32  has been recommended as part of the routine nursing assessment for all patients at hospital admissio
33 g in non-university-affiliated hospitals and nursing assistants were at high risk of symptoms of anxi
34 or nursing staff (both registered nurses and nursing assistants) working in hospitals have been adopt
35 ommendations for strengthening compassion in nursing care and consequently 'intentional rounding' was
36             Ambulatory care, inpatient care, nursing care facility stay, emergency department care, d
37     The current article provides a review of nursing care for the different complications of patients
38  environments and workflow that will enhance nursing care interventions.
39 If an intervention to increase compassionate nursing care is required, it may be better to start afre
40                            Associations with nursing care left undone were consistent with this patte
41 ither improves the delivery of compassionate nursing care nor addresses the policy imperative it was
42  and there is very limited information about nursing care of patients with cirrhosis compared with ot
43  problems for nurses and may also affect the nursing care quality for patients.
44 al anomalies, and our future encounters with nursing care represent all that we know to be excellent
45  It has the potential to reduce the scope of nursing care to a minimum standard, leading to a focus o
46 nough staff for quality or leaving necessary nursing care undone, after controlling for the staffing
47 ts with 24-hour support for personal care or nursing care), although the evidence on whether probioti
48 ication are essential components of oncology nursing care, which are often played down.
49 dress these evidence gaps in fundamentals of nursing care.
50                                              Nursing comprised 77% of the sample, 88% were female, 85
51 choice (beta -6.995; p = 0.0031), those with nursing conflict (beta -3.527; p = 0.0067), those who pe
52 hronic disease, with particular reference to nursing contribution and practice.
53                                    The basic nursing curriculum should include self-care management s
54 tal of 1044 registered nurses from different nursing departments were surveyed.
55 ociation between observation data and actual nursing documentation, and 4) considerations for model d
56 rsations with staff, scrutiny of medical and nursing documentation, and measures of patient health st
57 o have received skilled nursing or unskilled nursing (e.g., nursing aide for activities of daily livi
58 ance of self-care and self-compassion within nursing education and nursing guidance.
59 portive care, the central pillar of oncology nursing, enables and empowers people to self-manage wher
60 the history of the concept of empathy within nursing, explain why nurses are sometimes warry of adapt
61                            Patients entering nursing facilities (NFs) are frequently colonized with a
62 Improvement (BPCI) model 3, in which skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) assumed accountability for pat
63 ssions, discharges, and mortality at skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) in 3 metropolitan areas during
64  care hospitals (ACHs; 141, 50%) and skilled nursing facilities (SNFs; 113, 40%), and less frequently
65 f discharge, with more admissions to skilled nursing facilities and fewer discharges to home.
66 acilities, and 12 ventilator-capable skilled nursing facilities) in the Chicago metropolitan area, su
67  long-term acute care hospitals, 351 skilled nursing facilities, and 12 ventilator-capable skilled nu
68  infection can spread rapidly within skilled nursing facilities.
69  survivors, 40.8% were discharged to skilled nursing facilities.
70 01-1.16]; p = 0.049), discharge to a skilled nursing facility (1.28 [1.20-1.36]; p < 0.001), and leav
71 st known outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 at a skilled nursing facility (SNF) in Illinois on 15 March 2020 and
72 sms (CPOs) at one ventilator-capable skilled nursing facility (vSNF-A).
73         Total inpatient hospital and skilled nursing facility admission counts, costs, and mortality
74 ssion sepsis cost and any subsequent skilled nursing facility admission for all (fee-for-service and
75 ate cost of inpatient admissions and skilled nursing facility admissions for Medicare Advantage patie
76 beneficiaries who were admitted to a skilled nursing facility after an inpatient hospital admission,
77         Inpatient rehabilitation and skilled nursing facility care accounted for over 80% of the vari
78                    The total cost of skilled nursing facility care in the 90 days subsequent to an in
79 of a confirmed case of Covid-19 in a skilled nursing facility in King County, Washington, Public Heal
80 e to intermediate-/long-term care or skilled nursing facility stays (4.7 days), 30% to death (2.5 day
81 ve test result in a resident at this skilled nursing facility, 57 of 89 residents (64%) tested positi
82 eased with age (>=60 yrs.), admission from a nursing facility, Charlson score, altered mental status,
83                            One, in a skilled nursing facility, led to rapid transmission and signific
84 ive and spent outside of a hospital, skilled nursing facility, or intermediate-/long-term acute care
85 f they survive to discharge from the skilled nursing facility, they are more likely to go next to a c
86 ification of a case of Covid-19 in a skilled nursing facility, we assessed transmission and evaluated
87  SARS-CoV-2 was demonstrated in this skilled nursing facility.
88  were admitted from a senior home or skilled nursing facility.
89 ssion were more likely to die in the skilled nursing facility; more likely to be readmitted to an acu
90 ever, the compliance among RCTs published in nursing field is unknown.
91 acteristics, vital signs, laboratory values, nursing flowsheet data, and outcomes data were collected
92 ntifies that formal permission (e.g., within nursing guidance) may be necessary for some nurses to lo
93 self-compassion within nursing education and nursing guidance.
94                          Numerous reviews of nursing handover have been undertaken, but none have foc
95 , implementation of these countermeasures in nursing has lagged behind other shift work oriented indu
96                                              Nursing home (NH) patients often acquire colonization wi
97 l differences in influenza vaccination among nursing home (NH) residents during the 2008-09 influenza
98 entable infection-related hospitalization in nursing home (NH) residents.
99 etrospective cohort study based on quarterly nursing home assessments between April 2014 and January
100 xplicitly discourages physical restraints in nursing home care and suggests alternative practices may
101  CCBM: from 0.7% to 10.4% (p < 0.001) in the nursing home collection, and from 0.3% to 5.0% (p < 0.00
102                   This study uses Medicare's Nursing Home Compare and a university long-term care dat
103                                          Six nursing home norovirus outbreaks occurring in South Caro
104 tend to drive norovirus transmission in U.S. nursing home norovirus outbreaks.
105 ften result in long-term hospitalization and nursing home placement.
106 for evaluation of its effectiveness in daily nursing home practice.
107  of adverse events; measures of hospital and nursing home quality; and patient satisfaction.
108  of disease progression on the basis of age, nursing home residence, comorbid conditions, obesity, re
109 lity pension, income, days of sick leave, or nursing home residency.
110 sion, income, number of sick leave days, and nursing home residency.
111 , 164 (79%) had diarrhea, and 158 (76%) were nursing home residents (vs.
112 17 in 591 nursing homes and covering >90% of nursing home residents in Ontario, Canada.
113 Diagnosing urinary tract infections (UTI) in nursing home residents is complex, as specific urinary s
114 phylococcus aureus (MRSA) colonization among nursing home residents is high.
115 e six countries studied, staff reported that nursing home residents were restrained through limb and/
116                                              Nursing home residents with dementia commonly experience
117 teristics of eating performance cycles among nursing home residents with dementia.
118 t due to aging population, growing number of nursing home residents, poorly understood biology, and d
119 associated diarrhea (AAD) occurs in 2-25% of nursing home residents, which may lead to dehydration, m
120                     Of deaths, 66 (50%) were nursing home residents.
121 0% were Black, 16% were Latinx, and 21% were nursing home residents.
122 iotics demonstrated the prevention of AAD in nursing home residents.
123  people, active-duty military personnel, and nursing home residents.
124 ldest segment of the US population-long-stay nursing home residents.
125 e not suitable to distinguish UTI and ASB in nursing home residents.Trial registration Netherlands Tr
126 r adjusting for 14 resident characteristics, nursing home urine culturing predicted total antibiotic
127                                              Nursing home urine culturing was measured as the proport
128                                  We examined nursing home urine-culturing practices and their associa
129 ospital administration; $255 versus $123 for nursing home, home care, and hospice administration; and
130  level of dependency of residents within the nursing home.
131 ey are more likely to go next to a custodial nursing home.
132 .0001), most commonly hospice/death (12%) or nursing home/long-term care facility (6%).
133  contact and most intensive interaction with nursing-home residents are also those having the least t
134 ' and nurses' perceptions of the position in nursing-home settings in Israel, using a standardized to
135 roportion was highly variable across the 591 nursing homes (10th percentile = 3.4%, 90th percentile =
136 ilities (44.5% to 31.0%; P(trend)<0.001) and nursing homes (30.8% to 25.7%; P(trend)<0.001).
137                                           30 nursing homes (of at least 20 beds) in northern Israel.
138 isease 2019 (COVID-19) have been reported in nursing homes and assisted living facilities; however, t
139   Rates of antibiotic use vary widely across nursing homes and cannot be explained by resident charac
140 s between April 2014 and January 2017 in 591 nursing homes and covering >90% of nursing home resident
141    In addition, the heterogeneous burdens in nursing homes and the variable reporting of deaths of ol
142  case rates between high- and low-performing nursing homes based on CMS quality measures.
143                              In 2016, 42% of nursing homes enrolled in the National Healthcare Safety
144  age structures and heterogeneous burdens in nursing homes explain some but not all of the heterogene
145                                              Nursing homes have highly divergent urine culturing rate
146                          End-of-life care in nursing homes holds several risk factors for the use of
147 n among residents of a sample of Connecticut nursing homes in the first half of May 2020.
148 tics administration was implemented in three nursing homes of the Rivas Zorggroep for residents with
149 esidents in care homes (residential homes or nursing homes that provide residents with 24-hour suppor
150          A total of 131 218 residents in 591 nursing homes were included; 7.9% of resident assessment
151  care facilities, including 59 hospitals, 92 nursing homes, 1 long-term acute care hospital (LTACH),
152 ative expenditures of hospitals, physicians, nursing homes, home care agencies, and hospices.
153                                       In 322 nursing homes, staff returned questionnaires regarding 1
154 plementation of probiotics to prevent AAD in nursing homes, to evaluate effects on AAD occurrence, an
155                         In all participating nursing homes, we identified all residents who died duri
156 dementia and 29 staff (42 unique dyads) in 9 nursing homes.
157 itation wards, in the thirteen participating nursing homes.
158 , probiotics are not routinely used in Dutch nursing homes.
159  through prisons in much the same way it has nursing homes: after being introduced by staff or newly
160 nasopharyngeal samples (5.4% vs. 5.4% in the nursing homes; and 4.3% vs. 4.7% in the family homes).
161 ated at the facility unit level and included nursing hours per patient day (NHPPD) for all nursing pe
162  However, the differential change in rate of nursing hours per patient day following implementation o
163                                              Nursing hours per patient day increased in both time per
164 ion rates associated with a unit increase in nursing hours per patient day.
165 ooth adaptation to and retention in clinical nursing; however, the longitudinal relationship between
166 d leading research will further show the key nursing impact on care as part of a team.
167 care warrants the inclusion and promotion of nursing in every country's cancer strategy.
168 e is known about the neuroendocrine basis of nursing in non-mammalian species.
169 g the hands-on care provided by second-level nursing is necessary, along with systems-level shift tha
170                                              Nursing is one of the largest occupations for women in e
171                              Presenteeism in nursing is particularly significant because it puts pati
172          Around 36% of the RCTs published in nursing journals did not report how they reached their s
173  conducted to identify all RCTs published in nursing journals from January 2016 to December 2016.
174 nal database search of all RCTs published in nursing journals was conducted.
175 e inadequately reported in RCTs published in nursing journals.
176 .78; 95% Confidence Interval: 0.71-0.85) and Nursing License Compact membership (Odds Ratio=0.23; 95%
177 cs, higher numbers of border-states adopting Nursing License Compact membership (Odds Ratio=0.51; 95%
178 pita, state Board of Medicine governance and Nursing License Compact membership.
179 pathy is a topic of continuous debate in the nursing literature.
180 geneity of the concept of empathy across the nursing literature.
181        The results may provide clues to help nursing managers identify nurses' vulnerability to compa
182 h unmasking as dopamine release drops during nursing, may partially explain the reconfiguration of TI
183 ndependence will require cooperation between nursing, medicine and policy makers.
184 y of newborn mice was that obtained from the nursing mother, the microbiota community progressed towa
185 portance of considering the immune status of nursing mothers in studies of immune development and res
186 each) of individuals over 60 years living in nursing (n = 299) or family (n = 300) homes were screene
187 ll from the International Council of Nurses, Nursing Now, and WHO for nurses to move to higher levels
188 ng of offspring with physiological products (nursing) occurs in many animals, yet little is known abo
189  for race/ethnicity) to 1) go to sleep while nursing or drinking something other than water, 2) eat s
190 on were more likely to have received skilled nursing or unskilled nursing (e.g., nursing aide for act
191 ely studied 3398 occupationally exposed HCP; nursing personnel accounted for most exposures (n = 1705
192 ursing hours per patient day (NHPPD) for all nursing personnel and number of catheter-associated urin
193 diseases (including antibiotic stewardship), nursing, pharmacy, a patient advocate, and a CPG methodo
194  trade agreements for the nursing workforce, nursing practice and public health using as an example t
195 tional importance for the nursing workforce, nursing practice and public health.
196 ified in the literature for implications for nursing practice and the nursing workforce from regulato
197 y provisions in trade agreements will affect nursing practice and the nursing workforce, and how this
198 nsequences, and threats to standard oncology nursing practice are addressed here.
199 'intentional rounding' was incorporated into nursing practice in the United Kingdom.
200 ix key themes relevant to nursing workforce, nursing practice or public health were 1.
201                               Hierarchies in nursing practice underlined the split between critical t
202       Compassion is integral to professional nursing practice worldwide and a fundamental value in he
203 e that empathy is indispensable to effective nursing practice.
204 ebate over the role and import of empathy in nursing practice.
205 ndidates for CAR use, especially if they are nursing, pregnant or plan to become pregnant.
206 for a wider, international debate within the nursing profession about its future use.
207 ion-level requirements to realise continuous nursing provision of sexual health care in cancer care.
208 is of lactose and for normal growth rates of nursing pups.
209 e among key indicators of patient safety and nursing quality in healthcare facilities.
210 nit-level data from the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators((R)) 2010-2013 (16 quarters)
211 cumented in the electronic health record, 2) nursing-related tasks that remain undocumented, 3) the a
212 freedom has received little attention in the nursing research literature.
213 ceiving sufficient transition support (e.g. #nursing residency programs or #preceptorship)?
214 poor, despite this being a key aspect of the nursing role and a major contributor to positive outcome
215   Therapeutic alliance is a core part of the nursing role and key to the attainment of positive outco
216 ich, in some cases, debased the second-level nursing role because of its association with practical h
217 e experiential knowledge and skills of these nursing roles are central to the success of flow-related
218                  Perceptions of second-level nursing roles are primarily influenced by meso (organisa
219  professionals' perspectives on second-level nursing roles in the healthcare workforce.
220 understanding of the mechanisms by which key nursing roles lead the implementation of evidence-based
221                       Strategic and expanded nursing roles offered the possibility of reducing LOS, t
222 trated dichotomies wherein some second-level nursing roles were devalued, and others had increasing s
223 ond-level nurses themselves) on second-level nursing roles.
224 or the growing international trend to expand nursing roles.
225  professionals' perspectives on second-level nursing roles: a systematic review and thematic synthesi
226  address this issue should be implemented in nursing schools and hospitals.
227 ing quality of patient care and costs in the nursing sector.
228 the Veterans Health Administration Office of Nursing Services (VHA ONS) issued a Staffing Methodology
229                             Due to worldwide nursing shortages and difficulty retaining staff, long s
230  a robust oncology nursing workforce include nursing shortages, recruitment barriers (eg, perceptions
231 dicine, palliative care, pediatric medicine, nursing, social work, gerontology, geriatrics, patient a
232 n, US Pharmacopeia Chapter 800, and Oncology Nursing Society with clarifications in four key areas: m
233  difficulty retaining staff, long shifts for nursing staff (both registered nurses and nursing assist
234 adult 58.2%), and type of healthcare worker (nursing staff 43.4%, physicians 32.6%, other staff 53.8%
235 urce-constrained countries with few oncology nursing staff and continuing out-migration of nurses to
236     Its documentation is primarily valued by nursing staff as a means of protecting themselves throug
237 tra training and organisational endorsement, nursing staff did not regard dementia care as skilled nu
238 es coupled with a global shortage of skilled nursing staff has hindered long-term care facilities' ab
239 aspects of service design, and high rates of nursing staff illness.
240 r, creating service pressures exacerbated by nursing staff illness.
241  by individualised relational work by staff, nursing staff in particular.
242                                              Nursing staff struggle to respond to the needs of people
243     The evidence base for methods to support nursing staff to develop and maintain good therapeutic r
244 t, and situational factors influence whether nursing staff used equipment to lift/transfer a patient.
245 etimes difficult to develop and sustain, and nursing staff would arguably benefit from evidence-based
246 espondents (median age 33 yr; 71% women; 68% nursing staff).
247 tructured interviews were undertaken with 33 nursing staff, 17 senior nurse managers, 34 patients and
248 ewing records from the MRI technologist, MRI nursing staff, radiologist, emergency department, and pr
249 unds, but some concerns were raised from the nursing staff.
250 precautions that included masks for dialysis nursing staff.
251 stics and was generally ignored by frontline nursing staff.
252     Our results reveal that the modern human nursing strategy, with onset of weaning at 5 to 6 mo, wa
253 m a sample of 163 self-identified nurses and nursing students on Twitter.
254   All studies investigated interventions for nursing students or professionals working in hospitals o
255                                   Nurses and nursing students share uncivil tweets that could tarnish
256 tion in improving knowledge among nurses and nursing students.
257 mance of psychomotor skills of undergraduate nursing students.
258 stics of uncivil tweets posted by nurses and nursing students.
259 hing, one of the first procedures learned by nursing students.
260 recent issue of the International Journal of Nursing Studies and discuss some proposed responses to t
261                                              Nursing studies have for decades drawn on the philosophi
262 prevent some of the negative consequences of nursing such as burnout and compassion fatigue.
263 ored: 1) the average time to complete common nursing tasks documented in the electronic health record
264 a-Wide Information, CINAHL and Health Source Nursing through EBSCOhost, Web of Science, and the Cochr
265                                              Nursing time can be quantified by tools like the Nursing
266 into account that some patients require more nursing time than others.
267          You may think that there is much in nursing to glory in.
268 on from hospice being based on excellence in nursing to teams with a broad range of health profession
269                                Evidence that nursing transition programmes positively impact the tran
270  to justify the widespread implementation of nursing transition programmes.
271 n nature, focusing on measurable outcomes of nursing transition programmes.
272 ion experience; 2) the perceived benefits of nursing transition programmes.
273 als, and outcomes related to clinical and/or nursing treatment.
274 ons between care interventions, hospital and nursing unit characteristics and pressure ulcer rates.
275 ars controlling for community, hospital, and nursing unit characteristics in rural and urban location
276                                              Nursing unit characteristics were RN staffing, education
277 re measured as percentage of patients with a nursing unit-acquired pressure ulcer.
278  mental health acute care, and longterm care nursing units (called Community Living Centers, CLC in V
279 elirium screening questionnaire, pregnant or nursing, using a medication inhibiting cytochrome 450 3A
280 nd duration but not breastmilk feeding mode (nursing versus pumping).
281                         At the neural level, nursing was associated with increased activity in the la
282 brain regions in the convergent evolution of nursing within frogs and across vertebrates [4].
283 hift that clarifies the role of second-level nursing within healthcare teams to enhance collaborative
284 d to mitigate this challenge by streamlining nursing work, while also improving quality of care and p
285 nder differential towards men in higher paid nursing work.
286 taff did not regard dementia care as skilled nursing work.
287 of presenteeism are particularly high in the nursing workforce and the impact of nurse presenteeism n
288 or implications for nursing practice and the nursing workforce from regulatory and labour provisions
289 fortunately, challenges to a robust oncology nursing workforce include nursing shortages, recruitment
290                          The global oncology nursing workforce is essential to achieving Sustainable
291 ldwide increases, the future of the oncology nursing workforce is reflected in the call from the Inte
292 eements will affect nursing practice and the nursing workforce, and how this may subsequently impact
293 y research investigating presenteeism in the nursing workforce, in all clinical settings, in the Engl
294 the implications of trade agreements for the nursing workforce, nursing practice and public health us
295 iewed is of international importance for the nursing workforce, nursing practice and public health.
296                   Six key themes relevant to nursing workforce, nursing practice or public health wer
297  impact of presenteeism as it relates to the nursing workforce.
298  for research related to presenteeism in the nursing workforce.
299  contradicting results on the association of nursing workload and mortality.
300 de that it is more important to focus on the nursing workload that the patients generate rather than

 
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