2018
DOI: 10.3310/hsdr06380
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Nurse staffing levels, missed vital signs and mortality in hospitals: retrospective longitudinal observational study

Abstract: Background Low nurse staffing levels are associated with adverse patient outcomes from hospital care, but the causal relationship is unclear. Limited capacity to observe patients has been hypothesised as a causal mechanism. Objectives This study determines whether or not adverse outcomes are more likely to occur after patients experience low nurse staffing levels, and whether or not missed vital signs observations mediate any… Show more

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Cited by 100 publications
(126 citation statements)
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References 126 publications
(177 reference statements)
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“…Repeated exposure to children with chronic illnesses, prevalent in this audit in the higher BedsidePEWS group, might have determined a ≥ 4 hourly frequency of documented patient observations. In addition, workload and nurse/patient ratios ranging from 1/4 in HDUs to 1/10 on pediatric wards may have affected the frequency of documented patient observations, vital signs and monitoring with higher nurse/patient ratios leading to an increased risk of missed care [12,13,14].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Repeated exposure to children with chronic illnesses, prevalent in this audit in the higher BedsidePEWS group, might have determined a ≥ 4 hourly frequency of documented patient observations. In addition, workload and nurse/patient ratios ranging from 1/4 in HDUs to 1/10 on pediatric wards may have affected the frequency of documented patient observations, vital signs and monitoring with higher nurse/patient ratios leading to an increased risk of missed care [12,13,14].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PNS® was devised by nurses from Fukui University Hospital to overcome quality and safety concerns raised regarding nursing care in acute care hospitals when the nurse‐to‐patient ratio in Japan improved from 1:10 to 1:7 (Central Social Insurance Medical Council, ). The concerns were raised because of a sudden increase in the number of new graduate nurses hired over a short period to fulfill hospital requirements, despite extensive evidence suggesting that an improvement in the nurse‐to‐patient ratio decreases patient mortality (Griffiths et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Omissions in nursing care are increasingly recommended as nursing quality measures (Griffiths et al, ; VanFosson, Jones, & Yoder, ). In part, this reflects a move away from relying solely on professional judgement (Allen, ) towards auditable systems and procedures (Power, ), particularly in nursing care (Pinder, Petchey, Shaw, & Carter, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet non‐compliance persists at night and for patients with the highest EWS values (Griffiths et al, ; Hands et al, ; Jones et al, ). While some non‐compliance is associated with low staffing levels, most is not (Griffiths et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%