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Registered Nurse Staffing

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When a nurse has a heavy workload due to staff levels being inadequate it can lead to fatigue, slower thought process, slower reactions/responses, burnout, more errors due to oversite, and even to more of an increase in inadequate levels of staffing due to staff calling out of work. Levels of inadequate staffing can develop a vicious cycle that can ultimately progress into more harm to patients. It can lower satisfaction scores on the facility with dissatisfied patients; and inadvertently cause an increase of cost to the facility and insurances because of readmissions and an increase in more adverse, sentinel, and never events occurring. As a nurse becomes overworked and fatigued their thought process slows down and reactions become sluggish, …show more content…

If the goal of National Hospital Quality Measures is to move health care payments away from simply paying for the provision of services to paying based on the quality process and outcomes associated with that service, then how could the medical facilities stay afloat financially with their registered nurses in this type of condition. “Research suggests that improved registered nurse staffing has a beneficial effect on patient outcomes. Conversely, research shows that the likelihood of both overall patient mortality (i.e., in-hospital death) and mortality following a complication (failure to rescue) increases by 7% for each additional patient added to the average registered nurse workload.” (An Evidence-Based Approach / Key Findings From Research Studies on Safe Nurse Staffing, …show more content…

We now know that the shortage of nursing is the shortage of care at the bedside and in all the clinical settings. And this has nothing to do with and is totally independent of the national supply of nursing. Solving the shortage of nursing care requires a different intervention than solving some workforce shortage. Ultimately there is not enough of budgeted positions for nurses and other caregivers. It is just plain and simple. It is all a matter of how much money and how we’re spending the money that we have. (Professor Linda Aiken: Nurse-patient ratios will save lives,

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