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Hospital Practice (hospital + practice)
Selected AbstractsToward a Theory of Self-Reconciliation Following Mistakes in Nursing PracticeJOURNAL OF NURSING SCHOLARSHIP, Issue 2 2007Nancy J. Crigger Purpose: To explore nurses' responses to making mistakes in hospital-based practice in the US. Methods: A grounded theory approach was used to explore the process that occurs after nurses perceive that they have made mistakes in practice. Theoretical sampling was used and data were collected until saturation occurred. Ten participants, who were registered nurses, described 17 personal mistakes. The mistakes they described occurred in hospitals. All participants were practicing nursing either in hospitals or in other work settings. Findings: A process of "Self-Reconciliation After Making Mistakes in Hospital Practice" was identified, with four distinct categories: reality hitting, weighing in, acting, and reconciling. The core category was reconciliation of the self, personally and professionally. Conclusions: This research was a first step toward the development of a theory of mistake making in nursing practice. This response to making mistakes is consistent with previous research and is related to cognitive dissonance theory. The responses to mistakes varied from less healthy responses of blaming and silence to healthier responses that included disclosure, apologizing, and making amends. Further research to develop the theory and to determine helpful interventions is suggested. [source] Using NIC to Describe the Role of the Nurse PractitionerINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING TERMINOLOGIES AND CLASSIFICATION, Issue 2003Cindy S. Haugsdal PURPOSE To have nurse practitioners (NPs) identify the 20 most prevalent NIC interventions describing their nursing practice; to determine if the NIC is applicable to the NP role. METHODS The study used a descriptive survey design. NPs with prescriptive privileges in the state of Minnesota received a cover letter and survey that included a description of NIC and a list of the 486 intervention labels and their definitions from the NIC (3rd ed.). Each participant was asked to identify all interventions performed at least once per month in their practice and to provide basic demographic data, including identification of NP specialty. FINDINGS A total of 1,190 surveys were mailed with a return rate of 37%. NPs' average age was 45 years; the average number of years of NP practice was 9. Employment in a clinic represented the work setting of 72% of respondents followed by hospital practice (11%) and long-term care (10%). Specialty (certified) areas were family practice (27%), pediatrics (21%), adult (19%), women's health (16%), geriatrics (11%), psychiatric (5%), and oncology (1%). The educational level was primarily master's degree (73%). NPs identified an average of 120 interventions they performed at least once per month. These interventions reflected areas of patient education and support, as well as documentation and physician collaboration. The 20 most frequently selected interventions were reported by 71%, 90% of respondents. Four core interventions ,"documentation,""telephone consultation,""teaching: prescribed medication," and "emotional support", were used at least once per month by all specialties. DISCUSSION The level of consistency (70%) among responses validates the strong foundation that professional nursing, as described by NIC, provides NPs in their role. Four core interventions and the remaining 16 most frequently selected interventions that are more specific to each specialty practice indicates that NIC is comprehensive enough to meet the needs of a variety of NP practices. CONCLUSIONS NIC encompasses key areas of interventions (health screening, treatment and management, health promotion and education, psychosocial support, indirect activities) central to the role of NPs, but qualitative comments described the need for more language within NIC to characterize the NP role related to the prescribing of medications and treatments. Some respondents found the definitions to be unclear as to whether they were performing or ordering/prescribing the intervention. This lack of clarity could be addressed by further development of the NIC definitions and activities so the advanced role of the NP is more fully described. Development of documentation systems using the core interventions identified by the various NP specialties is needed. Using standardized nursing language for documentation will enable NPs to build clinical databases that reflect and describe the role. Future research needs to be focused by NP specialty and to go beyond the NIC definition and include analysis at the activity level. [source] Evaluation of the usefulness of a new direct immunofluorescence assay (ScanVIT-LegionellaÔ) for monitoring hospital water systems contaminated with Legionella spp.LETTERS IN APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2010S. Ditommaso Abstract Aims:, To compare the efficiency of the ScanVIT-LegionellaÔ test (Vermicon, Munich, Germany) vs a conventional culture method for the quantification of Legionella spp. in hospital water samples in daily hospital practice. Methods and Results:, The detection of Legionella spp. takes place on a cultivated filter brought into contact with dye-marked gene probes. The results are analysed under fluorescence microscopy. Bacteria that light up green belong to the genus Legionella; those that light up both green and red belong to the species Legionella pneumophila. Our results showed that the ScanVIT test has a sensitivity of 90%; agreement between the two methods was 82%. In the 48 samples that tested positive with both methods, the Legionella concentration detected by the culture method was consistently higher. A statistically significant difference between the results obtained with the two test methods emerged at the Wilcoxon test (P < 0·001). Conclusion:, The ScanVIT test may be recommended for investigating the presence of Legionella by qualitative testing. Significance and Impact of the Study:, Given the simplicity of colony identification by fluorescence, the ScanVIT test can be used in laboratories where staffs are not experienced in identifying typical colonies of Legionella. [source] Venous thromboembolism risk among hospitalized patients: Magnitude of the risk is staggeringAMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY, Issue 9 2007Samuel Z. Goldhaber Quality assessment focuses on areas where measurement is easy and unequivocal. To determine whether high quality hospital medicine is being practiced, a natural target is assessment of the frequency of orders to implement preventive strategies against venous thromboembolism. Patient risk can be readily ascertained, and rigorous clinical trials have vetted effective strategies to prevent deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Concentrating on reducing the risk of venous thromboembolism is worthwhile because more than 4 million surgical patients and almost 8 million medical patients warrant specific prophylaxis orders each year in the United States alone. For those who do not receive preventive measures, the result may not be apparent during the index hospitalization. More likely, such patients will tend to develop deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism within the ensuing 90 days, either in a skilled nursing facility or at home in the community. It is now time for us to broaden our approach. What happens in the hospital (such as lapses in good hospital practice) does not necessarily stay in the hospital. Failure to prophylax against venous thromboembolism may have potentially devastating implications for months after hospital discharge. Am. J. Hematol., 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Procedural Sedation in the Community Emergency Department: Initial Results of the ProSCED RegistryACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 1 2007Alfred Sacchetti MD Abstract Objectives Procedural sedation and analgesia (PSA) has been well profiled in experimental studies in university emergency departments. Extrapolation of these practices into the community hospital setting is not well established. This report describes community hospital practices and outcomes in a multicenter PSA registry. Methods The Procedural Sedation in the Community Emergency Department (ProSCED) registry is a prospective observational database composed of consecutive emergency physician,directed procedural sedation cases in community hospitals. Registered procedures described by 15 categorical data fields are collected at the time of the patient encounter and entered into a secure Internet-housed database. Results A total of 1,028 procedural sedations were performed on 980 patients at 14 study sites. The most common specified procedures performed included shoulder relocation (392), hip relocation (102), elbow relocation (70), upper extremity fracture care (69), lower extremity fracture care (66), and facial laceration repair (67). Complications of any description occurred in 42 cases (4.1%), with no patient's disposition changed secondary to a complication. Patients' ages ranged from 1 month to 95 years, with a median age of 31 years. Of procedures attempted, 982 (95.5%) were successfully completed, 21 cases (2.0%) were adequately sedated but unable to have their procedure completed, and 21 cases (2.0%) were believed to be inadequately sedated. Medication use included midazolam in 423 cases (41.1%), propofol in 253 (24.6%), fentanyl in 253 (24.6%), etomidate in 241 (23.4%), and ketamine in 145 (14.1%), as well as several others. Cases using either ketamine or propofol exhibited the fewest complications, while those using fentanyl, hydromorphone, or midazolam demonstrated the highest complication rates. Conclusions Community emergency physicians deliver safe and effective PSA over a wide variety of ages and procedures while using a broad selection of agents. [source] |