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1.
Int Nurs Rev ; 69(4): 420-431, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35107837

ABSTRACT

AIM: To compare the occurrence and the reasons for unfinished care among coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and non-COVID-19 patients as perceived by nurses. BACKGROUND: The recent pandemic has imposed tremendous changes in hospitals in all countries. INTRODUCTION: Investigating the occurrence of and the reasons for unfinished care as perceived by nurses working in COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 units might help to gain insights and to address future pandemics. METHODS: A comparative cross-sectional study based on the STROBE guideline has been conducted during November 2020-January 2021. The Unfinished Nursing Care Survey, comprising part A (elements) and part B (reasons), was administered online to all 479 nurses working in medical and surgical units converted progressively into COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 units. A total of 90 and 200 nurses participated, respectively. RESULTS: No differences in the unfinished care occurrence have emerged at the overall level between nurses caring for COVID (2.10 out of 5; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.94-2.27) and non-COVID-19 patients (2.16; 95% CI, 2.06-2.26). Reasons for unfinished care reported significant higher averages among nurses caring for COVID (2.21; 95% CI, 2.10-2.31) as compared with those caring for non-COVID-19 patients (2.07; 95% CI, 2.01-2.14; p = 0.030). DISCUSSION: The overall occurrence of unfinished care was slightly higher compared with pre-pandemic data in all patients. CONCLUSIONS: Reasons triggering unfinished care were slightly different and were due to priority setting and human resources issues, which were perceived at higher significance among nurses working in COVID-19 compared with non-COVID-19 units. IMPLICATION FOR NURSING AND HEALTH POLICIES: A clear map of action has emerged that might be valid in the post-COVID-19 era as well as in the case of future pandemics.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Nursing Care , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , COVID-19/epidemiology , Pandemics , Workforce
2.
Assist Inferm Ric ; 41(4): 170-175, 2022.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37283169

ABSTRACT

. The implementation of a District Clinic to overcome the shortage of general practitioners in the Basso Vicentino area. INTRODUCTION: The demographic and epidemiological changes of Western societies lead to the implementation of new organizational models based on prevention and health promotion interventions mainly oriented to chronic patients. This approach promotes people's living places as the privileged place of care. AIM: To guarantee, in a rural area, the care of patients without a general practitioner, through the activation of the Primary Care District Clinic. METHODS: After having mapped the main chronic health problems of the catchment area, an outpatient care service based on an integrated medical-nursing approach was implemented. The Family and Community Nurse was responsible for the stratification of subgroups of patient according to their health problem, ensuring an integrated care of patients with chronic diseases or frail conditions, by education and symptoms monitoring. A convenience sample of 100 patients was selected, to analyze the degree of satisfaction with the care offered, by administering a questionnaire. RESULTS: Six months after its implementation, 4,000 patients accessed to the District Clinic. Those who answered the questionnaire declared high levels of satisfaction for the care received. The main needs were requests for repeated prescriptions and prescriptions for specialist examinations or visits for acute symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: The implemented model is promising, the patients were satisfied with the care received but would prefer to have contacts with the same nurse over time.


Subject(s)
General Practitioners , Nurse Practitioners , Humans , Nurse Practitioners/education , Ambulatory Care Facilities , Health Promotion
3.
Assist Inferm Ric ; 40(3): 137-142, 2021.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34783316

ABSTRACT

. Family nurses in Italy: an explorative survey. INTRODUCTION: The Family and Community Nurses (FCN) are unevenly distributed throughout Italy. AIM: to describe the numbers, functions and work situation of FCNs in Italy. METHODS: A questionnaire with 24 multiple-choice questions was sent to 60 Nursing and health professions District managers, to explore numerical standards of reference, recruitment methods, training, work environments and methods, hierarchical and functional dependencies, functions performed and level of autonomy. RESULTS: 38 (63%) managers from 14 regions responded. In 26 (68%) districts, FCNs are employed with numbers ranging from 2 to 350 per district (median FCN/inhabitants ratio of approximately 1/16.000 inhabitants (IQR 10.000-40.000). Nurses with at least 2 years of work experience (in home or medical care) were selected, and all have attended or are currently attending a training course (university, regional - 40% of the districts - or internal courses). In almost all Districts FCNs hierarchically depend on the Nurse Manager while functionally from the District Nurse or Medical Director. FCNs mostly work in multidisciplinary teams and in most Districts (21, 80%) perceive good levels of autonomy. CONCLUSIONS: Although a limited number of managers responded, these data provide a cross-section of the variability of numbers and organization at district level.


Subject(s)
Nurses , Humans , Italy , Surveys and Questionnaires
4.
J Adv Nurs ; 76(12): 3597-3608, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33009852

ABSTRACT

AIM: To evaluate whether the application of the Relationship-based care model as a new treatment, called "Take 5 min", affects the level of anxiety, depression, and perceived quality of nursing care of parents of paediatric patients and the work satisfaction of the nursing staff. DESIGN: Single-blind randomized controlled trial. METHODS: The trial was performed from February-July 2016. The trial was conducted with one intervention (N = 101) and one control group (N = 90). Nurses applied the treatment named "Take 5 Minutes", which consisted of dedicating some short time (from 5 to 10 min) to the relationship with the parents using specifically designed communication strategies. The primary outcome was the evaluation of anxiety and depression of parents; the secondary was the parent perceived quality of nursing care. RESULTS: In the experimental group, participants had a lower level of anxiety and depression and highlighted that the effect of the "Take 5 Minutes" was proportional to the initial seriousness of parents' anxiety and depression. Higher scores for the perception of the quality of care were given from the parents of the experimental group. CONCLUSION: The "Take 5 Minutes" treatment offered to parents of paediatric patients demonstrated significant improvements in terms of their anxiety, depression, and perceived quality of nursing care. IMPACT: Caregivers of paediatric patients are subject to psychological disorders such as depression and anxiety. The communication by the nursing community is of fundamental importance in the management of anxiety and depression in the caregivers of hospitalized patients. Caregivers who received the "Take 5 Minutes" treatment demonstrated a significant decrease in anxiety and depression compared with the control group caregivers. The perceived level of quality of nursing care showed a significant increase in the group of caregivers who received the T5M treatment. The RBC model does not require extra costs for health organizations and can be applied during the usual practice of care. Practices such as T5M could become part of paediatric patient care guidelines and nurses should be trained to apply them. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Padua Research: ID No. 10,034; ClinicalTrials.gov: ID No. NCT04199429.


Subject(s)
Nursing Care , Pediatrics , Anxiety , Caregivers , Child , Humans , Parents , Perception , Single-Blind Method
5.
J Nurs Manag ; 27(7): 1492-1504, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31349372

ABSTRACT

AIM: To support the development of appropriate policies and actions in the field of missed nursing care (MNC). BACKGROUND: There has been an ever-growing international debate on MNC, interventions that nurses have identified as necessary for their patients, but which for various reasons they are unable to provide or are forced to delay. Despite MNC's relevance, its translation into policies and actions has not been documented to date. METHOD: A consensus development method was employed involving (a) a nominal group composed of experts in the field, policymakers and the President of the Regional Nursing Professional Boards, and (b) 218 nurses appointed primarily at the managerial levels. RESULTS: A total of eight consensus statements were approved and organized in a series of sub-statements designed to (1) render the concept of MNC culturally acceptable in the Italian context, with the agreement that compromised nursing care (CNC) is the best term to be used in this field, as a synonym for MNC; (2) measure CNC as a strategy to increase patient safety; (3) select an appropriate CNC measurement tool; (4) optimize CNC measurement; (5) conduct effective CNC data analysis; (6) design and implement interventions to prevent and/or minimize CNC; (7) assess and disseminate findings on interventions' effectiveness; and (8) provide final remarks on the way to move forward. CONCLUSIONS: We developed a process to introduce the phenomenon of MNC in the Italian culture and agreed firstly on the term compromised nursing care, which better reflects MNC's meaning according to the context and facilitates an open discussion on the phenomenon both within and outside the profession. The following consensus statements emerged represent a systematic approach, starting from the measurement and finishing with the re-measurement of the occurrence of MNC after having implemented concrete actions. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING MANAGEMENT: The approved consensus statements can guide decision-makers to develop concrete policies and actions that promote the improvement of quality of care and patients' safety by minimizing and/or preventing MNC's occurrence.


Subject(s)
Medical Errors/statistics & numerical data , Nursing Care/standards , Organizational Policy , Consensus , Humans , Italy , Nursing Care/statistics & numerical data
6.
Assist Inferm Ric ; 37(3): 164-171, 2018.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30303198

ABSTRACT

. Missed nursing care and italian nursing practice: preliminary findings of a consensus conference. In recent years in Italy there has been renewed interest in missed nursing care due to various factors, such as participation in the RANCARE project, with 28 European and non-EU countries, the opportunity to develop international exchanges, specific projects and field based research. We explored a range of ideas and processes, culminating in a conference designed to address specific issues relating to missed nursing care, in the Italian nursing practice. After a preliminary review of the literature on the psychometric properties of the available tools, with the intent of further deepening our understanding of the concept of missed nursing care, its implications for practice, management, education and research. After two days of presentations and discussions, the more than participating nurses agreed on a set of preliminary recommendations regarding missed nursing care and Italian nursing practice. This paper reports on the preliminary consensus findings from the conference.


Subject(s)
Nursing Care , Consensus Development Conferences as Topic , Health Services Needs and Demand , Italy , Nursing Care/standards
7.
Ig Sanita Pubbl ; 74(6): 547-564, 2018.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31030213

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The indicators used in the Italian National Outcome Strategy does not include measurement of nursing care outcomes so these have not yet been assessed systematically in our country but only in the context of specific research projects. Positive and negative outcomes of nursing care have been documented in the literature, the latter associated with missed nursing care, a phenomenon that occurs when conditions are such that nurses are unable to deliver planned care to patients. OBJECTIVES: To describe the rationale, methodology and main results achieved to date in the development of a regional policy aimed at establishing a panel of indicators for monitoring nursing care-sensitive outcomes hospitals in publicly funded hospitals in the Veneto Region (northern Italy). METHODS: A plurennial, multi-method project based on [1] identification of selection criteria for a Minimum Data Set of indicators; [2] a rapid review of the literature and of the policies established internationally to measure nursing care-sensitive outcomes; [3] the establishment of an initial panel of indicators and evaluation of any critical issues with the chosen indicators, and [4] identification of the most appropriate tool for measuring missed nursing care. RESULTS: The medical and surgical units were considered to be the most suitable settings for the pilot study. Following the literature review, indicators that were already being monitored in the current regional information system were chosen, with the intent to prevent an additional administrative burden to nurses. By using a progressive consensus process, five outcome indicators (functional status, falls, pressure sores, urinary tract infections, aspiration pneumonia) and one process indicator (missed nursing care) were selected., and the tools for measuring the above-mentioned indicators and their related risks, were identified. A regional policy was then established to measure these indicators in a pilot phase, with the intent of implementing them as stable indicators to be measured in the new computerized hospital information system. CONCLUSIONS: An initial panel of nursing-sensitive outcome indicators has been defined to be used in Internal Medicine and General Surgery units of hospitals in Italy's Veneto Region. Despite its limitations, the project represents the first effort to create a regional policy to measure the contribution of nursing care to the health outcomes of patients and that will also the identification of potential relations with other variables such as personnel staffing and/or skill mix.


Subject(s)
Health Policy , Hospitals, Public/standards , Nursing Care/standards , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/organization & administration , Quality Indicators, Health Care , Accidental Falls/statistics & numerical data , Catchment Area, Health , Hospital Units , Humans , Italy , Nursing Staff, Hospital , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/methods , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/standards , Patient Acuity , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling , Pilot Projects , Pneumonia, Aspiration/epidemiology , Pneumonia, Aspiration/nursing , Pressure Ulcer/epidemiology , Pressure Ulcer/nursing , Urinary Tract Infections/epidemiology , Urinary Tract Infections/nursing
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