医学
不利影响
人员配备
肺炎
急诊医学
可能性
优势比
败血症
重症监护医学
护理部
内科学
逻辑回归
作者
Sung-Hyun Cho,S Ketefian,Violet H. Barkauskas,Dean G. Smith
出处
期刊:Nursing Research
[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins]
日期:2003-03-01
卷期号:52 (2): 71-79
被引量:504
标识
DOI:10.1097/00006199-200303000-00003
摘要
Background Nurse staffing levels are an important working condition issue for nurses and believed to be a determinant of the quality of nursing care and patient outcomes. Objectives To examine the effects of nurse staffing on adverse events, morbidity, mortality, and medical costs. Methods Using two existing databases, the study sample included 232 acute care California hospitals and 124,204 patients in 20 surgical diagnosis-related groups. The adverse events included patient fall/injury, pressure ulcer, adverse drug event, pneumonia, urinary tract infection, wound infection, and sepsis. Multilevel analysis was employed to examine, simultaneously, the effects of nurse staffing and patient and hospital characteristics on patient outcomes. Results Three statistically significant relationships were found between nurse staffing and adverse events. An increase of 1 hour worked by registered nurses (RN) per patient day was associated with an 8.9% decrease in the odds of pneumonia. Similarly, a 10% increase in RN Proportion was associated with a 9.5% decrease in the odds of pneumonia. Providing a greater number of nursing hours per patient day was associated with a higher probability of pressure ulcers. The occurrence of each adverse event was associated with a significantly prolonged length of stay and increased medical costs. Patients who had pneumonia, wound infection or sepsis had a greater probability of death during hospitalization. Conclusion Patients are experiencing adverse events during hospitalization. Care systems to reduce adverse events and their consequences are needed. Having appropriate nurse staffing is a significant consideration in some cases.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI