To explore whether a delay from referral to first contact with nurse-led community health services is associated with the likelihood of subsequent emergency department attendance.
We use individual linked administrative data on use of community health and hospital services. We identify a cohort of 343,721 individuals referred to community health services in England by their primary care provider in 2019. We then track their subsequent community healthcare contacts and emergency department attendances.
We exploit variation in the time to contact caused by weekend delays, which create longer times to first contact for people referred later in the working week. The main analysis compares patients referred on Thursday with those referred on Tuesday.
We show that 6.7% of patients referred on Thursday wait an extra two days for their first community contact relative to those referred on Tuesday. Despite this delay, we find no evidence that people referred on Thursday are more likely to have a subsequent emergency department attendance compared to those referred on Tuesday.
We do not find delayed community health services contact to be associated with an increased risk of emergency attendance amongst patients referred to community services by their primary care provider. This suggests that short delays in contact time are not detrimental for this group.
Shifting care from hospital to community settings is a key priority for health systems internationally. In England, community health services face significant staffing shortages, limiting the extent to which services can be responsive and support the desired strategic shift. Our findings suggest that these constrained community providers could use their limited capacity to prioritise responding quickly to other patients without harming those referred via primary care.
STROBE guidelines.
This study did not include patient or public involvement in its design, conduct, or reporting.
To explore baseline activities of daily living (ADL) profiles and their association with memory decline over time in cognitively healthy, community-dwelling older adults.
Observational panel study.
This study analysed data from Waves 7–10 of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (the search was performed on May 28, 2024), including 2925 older adults aged above 65 with no dementia or cognitive impairments at baseline (Wave 7, 2014–2015). To categorise participants by their daily functional abilities at baseline, latent class analysis was conducted to derive participants' activities of daily living profiles. A linear mixed model was used to explore whether these baseline activity profiles might predict different memory decline rates (trajectories) over time, accounting for baseline demographic factors (gender, age, ethnicity, education, marital status and chronic diseases).
Social demographics (younger age, female gender, white ethnicity, higher education and being partnered) and ADL profiles outweigh health conditions in predicting participants' memory function. Different baseline profiles were linked to different memory decline trajectories. An impairment profile with grocery shopping capability was linked to slower memory decline.
This study showed that ADL profiles had a substantial correlation with memory decline, accounting for the significant impact of sociodemographic factors. An impairment profile that preserved grocery shopping abilities appeared to offer protective benefits and potentially slow memory decline.
Strengthening nursing strategies that support older adults in maintaining the ability to grocery shop, such as guiding caregivers to promote involvement rather than shopping for the older adults entirely, or accompanying older adults grocery shopping as part of community nursing care, might help delay age-related memory decline in this population.
Patients or members of the public were not directly involved in the study's design, conduct, reporting, or dissemination plans.
To evaluate whether information about patients' poor sense of security in hypothetical vignette scenarios increases nurses' projected intent to report safety events.
Quantitative, cross-sectional factorial survey vignette experiment administered online.
A convenience sample of 60 nurses from adult inpatient hospital units at a Midwest academic medical center participated in February 2025. Participants responded to demographic questions and eight factorial vignettes, each describing a patient-reported safety breach and incorporating four patient-related factors. Four vignettes included information that the patient had a poor sense of security, and four did not, presented in random order. Following each vignette, participants rated their level of concern about the patient's report, perceived harm to the patient, and likelihood of reporting the patient's concern. A linear mixed-effects modelling approach, accounting for clustering within participants, was used to estimate the effects of the sense of security information factor on nurses' responses.
The sense of security information was associated with higher ratings of (a) degree of concern, (b) perceived harm to the patient, and (c) intent to report the patient's concern, after adjusting for vignette- and participant-level covariates. The vignette patient's perception of physical harm was positively associated with all three ratings. Nurses' greater hospital experience was associated with lower ratings across outcomes.
Obtaining information that the patient felt insecure was associated with heightened concern about the safety event, greater perceived harm, and increased intent to report the concern.
Sense of security assessment may be a risk-agnostic, patient-centered intervention that nurses can routinely perform, regardless of the safety event circumstances.
Although a system of evidence-based practices within a safety culture is essential to hospital safety efforts, nurses' judgements of and responses to patient safety concerns play a critical role and should not be overlooked.
STROBE guidelines.
This study did not include patient or public involvement in its design, conduct, or reporting.
To compare the power styles that nurses perceive and expect from nurse managers at two time points. The study aims to investigate any changes in nurses' perceptions and expectations regarding the power styles of nurse managers over a six-year period.
Repeated cross-sectional desing.
The study was conducted with 158 nurses at Time-1 and 103 nurses at Time-2. Data were collected using the Personal Information Form and the Perceived Leadership Power Questionnaire. For data analysis, frequency and percentage distribution, arithmetic mean, t-test, and Cronbach's Alpha were applied.
It was determined that the power style most perceived by nurses in their nurse managers was Referent Power at Time-1 and Expert Power at Time-2, while the expected power style was Expert Power at both Time-1 and Time-2.
It was observed that the perceived power styles of nurse managers changed over the course of the study. The power styles perceived by the nurses were consistent with the power styles they expected.
The perceived power styles of nurse managers may change over time. Identifying this change could facilitate the determination of effective leadership and communication styles.
The study examined changes in nurses' perceptions of nurse managers' power styles over time. Nurses perceived Referent Power in Time-1 and Expert Power in Time-2, while expecting Expert Power in both periods. This research contributes to enhancing leadership in nursing, understanding power dynamics in nurse-manager relationships, and improving nursing care quality.
STROBE statement selected as EQUATOR checklist.
No Patient or Public Contribution.
This study examines the mediating roles of distress, burden and social support, as well as the moderating effect of social support, in the relationship between the risk of prolonged grief and psychopathology in bereaved family caregivers of palliative care patients.
A cross-sectional study was conducted with 125 bereaved family caregivers. Validated assessment tools and the PROCESS macro in SPSS were used for mediation and moderation analyses.
Emotional burden mediated the relationship between prolonged grief risk and psychopathology, while distress and physical burden did not. Instrumental social support was a key mediator, highlighting the protective role of practical assistance, whereas emotional social support did not show significant mediation. Both types of social support moderated the relationship, buffering the negative impact on mental health.
Findings underscore the complex interactions between bereavement risk factors and psychopathology. Addressing emotional burden and enhancing social support may help reduce mental health risks in bereaved caregivers.
Healthcare professionals in palliative care should implement targeted interventions to reduce burden and strengthen support systems for bereaved caregivers. Nursing-led initiatives focused on emotional burden reduction may mitigate psychopathology risks.
Findings are relevant for healthcare professionals in palliative care and those designing interventions for bereaved caregivers. Emotional burden mediated the relationship between prolonged grief and psychopathology, while instrumental and emotional social support moderated its effects.
This study adhered to STROBE guidelines for cross-sectional research.
Beyond caregiver participation in data collection, patients and healthcare professionals contributed to study design, protocol development and dissemination.
To describe obstacles and ideas for improvement for the delivery of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and basic life support to wheelchair users.
A descriptive qualitative study underpinned by constructivism was conducted.
Semi structured interviews were completed with 26 participants from three cohorts: formal and informal carers, wheelchair users and healthcare professionals. Data were collected via online and in person interviews between February and June 2024. All participants were located in Australia, with the exception of one who was located in the United Kingdom. Data were analysed using thematic analysis.
Two major themes were identified: (1) obstacles to providing cardiopulmonary resuscitation and basic life support to a wheelchair user and (2) aspirations for improving cardiopulmonary resuscitation and basic life support for wheelchair users.
Participants shared ideas for how to improve emergency care for wheelchair users, highlighting a need for further research, testing and development of an education intervention.
Improving knowledge about providing emergency care to a wheelchair user could improve outcomes, save lives and reduce the life expectancy gap experienced by people with disability.
Approximately 2% of the global population use a wheelchair. Wheelchair use complicates the delivery of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and basic life support. There are currently no guidelines informing emergency care for wheelchair users available globally. Recognition of common symptoms of distress exhibited by wheelchair users, and options for the delivery of practical emergency care are required for wheelchair users.
The paper adheres to the EQUATOR reporting guidelines utilising the SRQR checklist.
Patients and the public were the driving force in recognising the gap in knowledge regarding the delivery of CPR to wheelchair users. Questions from patients and the public shaped the aims and methodological choices for this study.
To develop and validate decision trees using conditional probabilities to identify the predictors of mortality and morbidity deterioration in trauma patients.
A quasi-experimental longitudinal study conducted at a Level 1 Trauma Center in São Paulo, Brazil.
The study analysed 201 patient records using standardised nursing documentation (NANDA International and Nursing Outcomes Classification). Decision trees were constructed using the chi-squared automatic interaction detection (CHAID) algorithm and validated through K-fold cross-validation to ensure model reliability.
Decision trees identified key predictors of survival and mobility deterioration. Patients who did not require (NOC 0414) Cardiopulmonary Status but required (NOC 0210) Transfer Performance had a 97.4% survival rate. Conversely, those requiring (NOC 0414) Cardiopulmonary Status had a 25% risk of worsening mobility, compared to 9% for those who did not. K-fold cross-validation confirmed the model's predictive accuracy, reinforcing the robustness of the decision tree approach (Value).
Decision trees demonstrated strong predictive capabilities for mobility outcomes and mortality risk, offering a structured, data-driven framework for clinical decision-making. These findings underscore the importance of early mobilisation, tailored rehabilitation interventions and assistive devices in improving patient recovery. This study is among the first to apply decision trees in this context, highlighting its novelty and potential to enhance trauma critical care practices.
This study highlights the potential of decision trees, a supervised machine learning method, in nursing practice by providing clear, evidence-based guidance for clinical decision-making. By enabling early identification of high-risk patients, decision trees facilitate timely interventions, reduce complications and support personalised rehabilitation strategies that enhance patient safety and recovery.
This research addresses the challenge of improving outcomes for critically ill and trauma patients with impaired mobility by identifying effective strategies for early mobilisation and rehabilitation. The integration of artificial intelligence-driven decision trees strengthens evidence-based nursing practice, enhances patient education and informs scalable interventions that reduce trauma-related complications. These findings have implications for healthcare providers, rehabilitation specialists and policymakers seeking to optimise trauma care and improve long-term patient outcomes.
Patients provided authorisation for the collection of their clinical data from medical records during hospitalisation.
To explore the concurrent trajectories of depressive symptoms and insomnia among adolescents and to analyse the individual, familial and social predictors of the concurrent trajectories.
This study tracked depressive symptoms and insomnia in eight secondary schools annually from 2021 to 2023. We also collected data on individual, familial and social factors that may influence these conditions. Group-based multi-trajectory (GBMT) modelling was used to categorise adolescents into depressive–insomnia severity subgroups.
This study included 2822 adolescents, who were categorised into four groups, including the no symptom group, mild symptom group, symptom relief group and symptom increase group. Compared with the no symptom group, predictors of the mild symptom group were gender (OR = 1.30), academic performance (OR = 1.57), subjective well-being (OR = 0.78), anxiety (OR = 1.14), economic status (OR = 1.23) and relationship with teachers (OR = 1.46). Predictors of the symptom relief group were personality (OR = 1.75), academic performance (OR = 2.28), subjective well-being (OR = 0.69) and anxiety (OR = 1.25). Predictors of the symptom-increasing group were personality (OR = 2.45), academic performance (OR = 1.96), subjective well-being (OR = 0.69), anxiety (OR = 1.20), maternal education level (OR = 1.58), family function (OR = 0.93), parental relationship (OR = 2.07) and relationship with teachers (OR = 1.54).
This study provided a comprehensive understanding of the concurrent trajectories of depressive symptoms and insomnia among adolescents, revealing distinct subgroups and identifying predictors across individual, familial and social levels.
This study emphasises the importance of a multi-faceted approach involving family, school and society to promote adolescent mental health and also highlights the need for conducting precise interventions according to adolescents' features.
The identification of four distinct symptom trajectories and their predictors advances the understanding of adolescent mental health development, informing precision prevention strategies.
STROBE checklist.
None.
To examine the relationship among leadership, clinical teaching competencies, and structural empowerment of nursing clinical instructors in China.
A cross-sectional study.
A total of 152 nurses who come from three Grade A tertiary hospitals located in Beijing, Kunming, and Liaoning Province, China, completed an online questionnaire that included general information, clinical teaching information, the Conditions of Work Effectiveness Questionnaire-II, nurse leadership, and structural empowerment. SPSS 26.0 and AMOS 26.0 were used for normality test, descriptive statistics, correlation analysis, regression analysis, and structural equation model.
The study revealed that nurse leadership (r = 0.402) and structural empowerment (r = 0.568) both positively correlated with clinical teaching competencies. Specifically, the level of nurse leadership exhibited a low but direct positive effect on these competencies (β = 0.22), while the level of structural empowerment demonstrated a moderate direct positive effect (β = 0.56).
Enhancing nurse leadership and structural empowerment positively influence the clinical teaching competencies of nursing instructors.
Constructing a structural equation model to describe the relationship between leadership, structural empowerment, and teaching ability can provide the most intuitive direction for future research, so as to better improve the teaching ability of clinical nursing teachers.
No patient or public contribution.
To assess the care needs of older adults living in poverty in a high-income country and to analyse their relationship with other outcome variables.
A cross-sectional study.
Data were collected between September 2022 and February 2024 from 384 older adults in southeastern Spain. Descriptive statistics were calculated to assess older adults' care needs. A multiple linear regression analysis was carried out to determine the percentage by which the socio-demographic or outcome variables could explain the number of met care needs among older adults in poverty.
Around 20% of the care needs amongst older adults living in poverty were unmet. The most frequently unmet care need was related to money (53.6%). Almost 30% of participants were at risk of malnutrition, 18% felt lonely, and 80% perceived a low level of social support. Age, history of falls, emergency room visits, functionality, perceived social support, quality of life and nutritional status significantly predicted the number of needs met.
The health conditions of older adults living in poverty are suboptimal and may negatively influence their care needs. Nurses should consider these factors when designing, implementing and evaluating interventions to promote the biopsychosocial health of this population.
Nursing interventions to promote health amongst older adults living in poverty should focus on identifying unmet care needs, particularly those related to financial and social support. Interventions should prioritise improving nutritional status, enhancing social support networks and addressing loneliness.
Living in poverty increases older adults' vulnerability due to unmet financial, nutritional and social support needs. These unmet needs can negatively affect older adults' physical and mental health.
The study has been reported following the STROBE guidelines.
The study's participants only participated in the data collection process.
To investigate factors affecting the quality of life of parents of children with spina bifida and examine how family resilience mediates between parental depression and quality of life.
Cross–sectional study.
Secondary data analysis was performed using first-year data from a five-year spina bifida cohort project (2022–2026) in South Korea. The study included 162 parents of children aged 4–12 years with spina bifida. Data were collected using the Korean version of the Family Resiliency Scale, the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, and the WHO Quality of Life Scale.
Factors were found to have a statistically significant influence on the quality of life of parents of children with spina bifida: the child's need for enemas, parental stress, parental depression, and family resilience. Baron & Kenny's mediation analysis and bootstrap analysis in SPSS further confirmed that family resilience plays a mediating role between parental depression and quality of life. The indirect effect of parental depression on quality of life through family resilience was statistically significant, with a 95% confidence interval of [−0.2615, −0.0516].
The quality of life of parents with children with spina bifida is significantly influenced by both their child's daily symptom management and their psychological health. Family resilience plays a positive mediating role between parental depression and quality of life.
These findings support a two-track approach to family resilience building programs and the development of core intervention strategies to enhance the quality of life in spina bifida families.
This study adhered to Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guidelines.
There was no direct patient involvement in the study design, data collection, or analysis.
To determine the prevalence of burnout and back pain in homecare workers in Switzerland and assess their associations with psychosocial work environment factors.
National multicentre cross-sectional study.
Using paper-pencil questionnaires, data were collected from January 2021 to September 2021 from employees of 88 homecare agencies across Switzerland. Respondents who identified themselves as administrators, apprentices, or trainees, who were in leadership positions, or who were not involved in the provision of care or housekeeping were excluded from this analysis. Burnout was assessed with the Copenhagen Burnout Inventory Scale (possible score range 0–100) and back pain with a single item from the Federal Statistical Office's Swiss Health Survey. Multilevel regression analyses were used to assess burnout and back pain's associations with psychosocial work environment factors.
We included 2514 homecare workers. More than two-thirds (68.6%) reported back pain in the past 4 weeks. The overall mean burnout score was 36.0 (SD 18.3). Poorer work-life balance, higher perceived workload and verbal aggression from clients were positively associated with both outcomes. Better leadership and social support from colleagues were negatively associated with burnout. Higher role conflict levels correlated with higher burnout levels.
Our findings indicate that the psychosocial work environment should be considered when designing interventions to reduce the prevalence of burnout and back pain among homecare workers.
The high reported burnout and back pain prevalences among homecare workers highlight an urgent need to design and implement psychosocial work environment-improving interventions. In addition to contributing to homecare employees' long-term attraction and retention, protecting and promoting their health and well-being will likely not only benefit them, but also contribute to patient safety, quality of care and homecare sustainability.
The study reports the prevalence of burnout and back pain among homecare workers and their associations with psychosocial work environment factors. The results indicate that six psychosocial work environment factors—work-life balance, perceived workload, leadership quality, levels of social support from colleagues, role conflict levels, and verbal aggression from clients—all correlate with burnout and/or back pain in homecare workers. For policy makers, researchers, healthcare managers, and homecare agencies, this study's findings will inform the development of interventions to enhance homecare work environments, leading to improvements both in workers' health and in the quality of their care.
We have adhered to the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) reporting checklist for cross-sectional studies.
Our stakeholder group included patient representatives, policy makers, researchers, clinicians and representatives of professional associations. Throughout the study, all provided support and input on topics including questionnaire development, result interpretation and the design of strategies to improve response rates.
To develop a comprehensive and psychometrically validated scale for evaluating the core competencies of community nurses for public health emergencies.
A study of instrument development and validation was conducted.
A total of 1057 community nurses provided valid responses for this study conducted in Shanghai, China. Building upon previous study findings of the adapted core competency model and integrating the World Health Organisation's Framework for Action, this study was conducted in two phases. First, scale items were developed through systematic review, qualitative research, stakeholder meeting, and Delphi survey, refined with cognitive interviews to establish version 1.0 of the scale. Second, item analysis was performed with item-total correlations, Cronbach's alpha, and exploratory factor analysis, resulting in version 2.0. The final scale was produced after assessing the validity (content validity, confirmatory factor analysis, known-groups validity) and reliability (internal consistency, test–retest reliability).
The final scale consisted of 47 items categorised into four competency factors: prevention, preparation, response, and recovery competency. Factor analysis results indicated adequate factor loadings, excellent model fit, and well-established construct validity. The overall scale and its sub-factors exhibited high internal consistency and good test–retest reliability.
The study presents a theoretically grounded and scientifically validated scale measuring the competencies that community nurses need for public health emergency response.
This study enhances the theoretical framework of community nurses' core competencies in public health emergencies, provides a validated assessment tool, and clarifies their role in enhancing preparedness and effectiveness.
The study addressed the need for a standardised tool for assessing community nurse core competency for public health emergencies and will impact policy initiatives to enhance early prevention, emergency response, and integrated recovery practices in crisis management.
Strengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology checklist.
No Patient or Public Contribution.
To explore Australian Maternal and Child Health nurses' clinical supervision practice and barriers and facilitators to effective supervision.
An online survey was distributed to all nurses and managers in Victoria, Australia.
A total of 188 MCH nurses responded to the survey, and of these, 147 completed the 26-item version of the validated Manchester Clinical Supervision Scale. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics. The majority of nurses (91%) received facilitated group supervision, and most nurses (86%) were moderately or very satisfied with their clinical supervision. In total, 81% of nurses perceived clinical supervision to be of benefit according to the Manchester Clinical Supervision Scale-26 results. Open text responses were analysed according to barriers, facilitators and general comments. Key facilitators included supervisors with group facilitation skills and support for reflection. Barriers to effective supervision related to group dynamics, insufficient time and varied understanding of the purpose of sessions among participants.
Effective clinical supervision relies on the establishment of clear aims and shared understandings among participants, skilled facilitation and managerial support.
Clinical supervision can facilitate reflective practice and learning when implemented as intended. This study highlights the role of professional nursing bodies, service providers and educational institutes to raise awareness of the conditions needed to achieve this.
Complies with Equator Guideline (STROBE).
No patient or public contribution.
To investigate how leadership support influences nurses' innovation behaviour through the chain mediation of creativity, role identity and knowledge sharing.
Despite the recognised role of leadership in fostering innovation, the mechanisms linking leadership support to nurses' innovative behaviours remain under explored. Clarifying how creativity, role identity and knowledge sharing mediate this relationship is critical for optimising nursing practices.
This was a quantitative cross-sectional study.
A cross-sectional survey was conducted in March 2024 to collect data using the Leadership Innovation Support Scale, Creativity Role Identity Scale, Knowledge Sharing Scale and Nurses' Innovative Behavior Scale. Descriptive analysis, correlation analysis and chain-mediated effect analysis were performed using SPSS 26.0.
We found a positive relationship between leadership support and nurses' innovation behaviour; creativity role identity and knowledge sharing played a mediating role in this relationship. Moreover, there was a significant chain mediating effect of creativity role identity and knowledge sharing on the relationship between leader support and nurses' innovation behaviour.
Creativity role identity and knowledge sharing act as a chain-mediated mechanism between leadership support and nurses' innovative behaviours. Therefore, hospital managers should focus on the level of leadership support for innovation among nurses and implement targeted measures focusing on creativity role identity and knowledge sharing to improve nurses' innovation.
To promote the development of innovation in healthcare institutions, motivating nurses' innovative behaviour has become a key focus. Based on role identity theory and social exchange theory, this study explores the chain mediation effects of innovative role identity and knowledge sharing between leadership support and nurses' innovative behaviour. This suggests that supervisors can enhance support to help nurses better recognise their role in the innovation process, promoting the exchange of experiences and sharing of innovative outcomes, thereby further stimulating the overall innovation ability of the team.
None.
The aim of this study was to innovatively utilise the BERTopic model for topic modelling in order to comprehensively identify and understand the factors contributing to bed falls.
Retrospective study.
The study collected 241 reports of bed fall accidents recorded by nurses from Peking University Third Hospital Nursing Department from 2014 to 2024. Among them, 102 reports met the inclusion and exclusion criteria.
This study follows the Minimum Information for Medical AI Reporting (MINIMAR). It collected patient bed fall reports from Peking University Third Hospital between 2014 and June 2024, preprocessed the texts, utilised the BERTopic library in Python for topic modelling, and manually aggregated secondary topics by combining visualisation results and professional knowledge.
We utilised cluster bar charts to visually display the distribution of the 22 secondary topics and further consolidated them into five core topics through the use of a topic distribution diagram and a topic similarity matrix diagram. These topics were related to patient factors, ward equipment and surroundings factors, medication risk factors, caregiver factors, and nursing practice factors. The study highlights the environment's specificity in bed falls, especially bedside safety and patient-bed rail interaction.
The innovation of this study lies in the successful utilisation of BERTopic technology to identify topics of risk factors for bed falls through alternative data sources, providing a scientific basis for formulating preventive measures. The findings aim to optimise nursing processes, improve ward environments and enhance educational training, ultimately reducing patient bed falls and enhancing medical safety, nursing quality and patient experience.
This study not only helps nurses identify risk factors for patient bed falls, but also provides important guidance for developing effective prevention strategies.
No patient or public contribution applied.
The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between nursing workload at the time of intensive care unit discharge and the likelihood of intensive care unit readmission.
This single-center prospective cohort study was conducted at a Belgian academic hospital and included all intensive care unit admissions from June 1, 2021 to May 31, 2022.
The Nursing Activities Score was documented by the nurse responsible for each patient during every shift. Adult patients (≥ 18 years) with intensive care unit stay exceeding 24 h during the study period were eligible for inclusion. Those discharged to another hospital, a nursing home, or their own home were excluded due to the inability to ensure follow-up.
Among the 1293 eligible admissions recorded during the study period, 133 patients (10.3%) experienced readmission. Readmitted patients exhibited a higher prevalence of medical reasons for intensive care unit admission, significantly increased mortality rates, and longer hospital length of stay compared to non-readmitted patients. The average daily Nursing Activities Score did not differ significantly between the two groups. The Nursing Activities Score at intensive care unit discharge was notably higher in readmitted patients, and those with a score above the median at discharge demonstrated an increased risk of readmission within 30 days. In multivariable analysis, a high Nursing Activities Score at intensive care unit discharge was an independent predictor of readmission.
An elevated nursing workload, as indicated by the Nursing Activities Score recorded at intensive care unit discharge, was significantly associated with a higher risk of readmission.
The study examines the relationship between nursing workload at the time of ICU discharge and the likelihood of unplanned readmission. The results highlight the critical role of nursing workload assessment at ICU discharge in capturing the complexity of care requirements patients face at discharge. The results emphasise the importance of revising discharge planning processes, identifying nursing workload as a critical factor in unplanned readmissions.
STROBE guidelines were used for this study.
Not applicable.
(1) To analyse individual and institutional-level factors associated with urinary incontinence in older adults living in nursing homes; (2) to estimate the prevalence of urinary, faecal and double incontinence in nursing home residents.
Cross-sectional study.
Residents aged 65+ living in 22 nursing homes in Catalonia (Spain) were included. Descriptive, bivariate, and multilevel analyses were performed.
The final sample comprised 452 residents (75.9% female, mean age of 87.0 years). The prevalence of urinary, faecal and double incontinence was 77.5%, 46.1% and 45.7%, respectively. Urinary incontinence was statistically significantly associated with neurological conditions, moderate cognitive impairment, moderate dementia, severe cognitive impairment, very severe cognitive impairment and age.
Approximately three out of four nursing home residents suffered from urinary incontinence and almost half of the sample from faecal or double incontinence. Individual-level factors (cognition, neurological conditions and age) played a more important role than institutional-level factors for urinary incontinence.
The findings of this study highlight the importance of individual-level interventions to prevent and manage urinary incontinence in nursing homes.
In Catalonian nursing homes, individual factors such as cognitive impairment and neurological conditions were more strongly associated with urinary incontinence than institutional factors. This has implications for improving care provided to older adults, particularly those with dementia and neurological conditions.
STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology) guidelines.
Nursing home residents were not involved in this study.
To investigate the association between healthcare workers' demographic and work-environment variables during the COVID-19 pandemic and their turnover intentions or actual turnover after two years.
Two-step longitudinal cohort study.
A nationwide longitudinal cohort study was conducted using a convenience sample of Belgian HCWs who participated in online surveys at two time points: November 24th, 2021, to March 15th, 2022 (Period 1), and November 16th, 2023, to December 12th, 2023 (Period 2).
Out of 2149 participants in the first survey, 700 responded in the second. During the pandemic, 31.3% intended to leave the profession. In Period 2, 52.3% of those reaffirmed their intention or had left (6.5%). Work autonomy, resilience, and perceived patient harm predicted turnover intention. Pandemic-related work pressure was the primary reason for leaving.
Promoting healthcare workers' autonomy and resilience is crucial for mitigating turnover. HCWs who experience patient harm during a pandemic will have a higher risk for turnover. Knowing this, healthcare managers and policymakers should develop strategies to prepare for future health crises.
Enhancing work autonomy and resilience among healthcare workers can improve retention and job satisfaction, ultimately leading to better patient care and a more stable healthcare workforce.
Problem Addressed: The study addresses the high turnover intentions among healthcare workers during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Main Findings: Work autonomy, resilience, and perceived patient harm due to workload are significant predictors of turnover intentions.
Impact: The research impacts healthcare managers and policymakers by providing insights into factors that can improve healthcare workers' retention and job satisfaction.
This study adhered to the STROBE guidelines for reporting observational studies.
No patient or public contribution.
To describe practice nurse long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) knowledge and practices.
Cross-sectional survey.
Between July and December 2021, we conducted an online survey using convenience sampling to recruit Australian nurses who work in primary care, known as practice nurses. We collected data about demographics and knowledge and practices relating to LARC. Analysis used descriptive statistics and Poisson regression.
From 489 eligible responses, most respondents were women and the majority worked in metropolitan practices. Most (90.4%) believed that their advice could influence women's contraceptive choices. Few inserted/removed intrauterine devices (IUDs) (11.2%) or implants (15.9%). Of those that did insert LARC, most did so one to five times in the last month (IUDs 72.2%; implants 73.6%). General practice as a primary place of work was negatively associated with implant provision. Respondents with more general practice experience (≥ 15 years) and/or higher qualifications were more likely to respond correctly to knowledge questions and provide IUDs or implants. Most (62.8%) correctly identified IUD suitability for nulliparous women.
Practice nurses have knowledge gaps and limited practice opportunities for LARC provision.
Practice nurses need supportive funding policies and ongoing education and skills development to enhance patient access to LARC and their choice of provider.
CHERRIES guideline.
Partner organisations assisted with the study's recruitment.
ACTRN12622000655741