Publication | Closed Access
Evaluation of a patient care delivery model: system outcomes in acute cardiac care.
21
Citations
23
References
2010
Year
Heart FailureHealth Care ManagementHierarchical Linear ModellingPrimary CareAcute Cardiac CareCardiologyHealth Services ResearchOccupational NursingAcute CareOutcomes ResearchCardiac CareNursingSystem OutcomesHospital EnvironmentPatient SafetyNursing ResearchWork EnvironmentMedicineEmergency Medicine
Hierarchical linear modelling was used to evaluate the influence of nurse staffing, work environment, and nurse and patient variables on system outcomes based on data collected in Canadian cardiac and cardiovascular inpatient units. Staffing utilization levels below 80% at the unit level and less overtime optimized perceived care quality and the completion of therapeutic interventions. Fewer patients per nurse improved perceived care quality and reduced longer-than-expected length of stay. Nurse reports of greater resource adequacy were associated with less absenteeism and fewer uncompleted or delayed nursing interventions. System outcomes were also influenced by patient characteristics (health, pre-operative education, nursing diagnoses); nurse characteristics (experience, expertise, health, effort-reward imbalance); and work-environment factors (autonomy, unit instability).
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