Developing And Validating Indicators Of Quality Nursing Care In A Paediatric Setting
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$92,067.00
Summary
Nursing sensitive outcomes are measures of the quality of care provided by nurses. This study will establish those measures within Australian children’s hospitals. This information can be used to better understand and improve nurses’ practice. It will provide a standardised approach to measuring outcomes of paediatric nursing care and will provide reliable and valid information for benchmarking with similar children’s hospitals which in turn will assist in promoting patient safety.
Patient and nurse outcomes and the cost of nurses' turnover in Australian hospitals. An adequate supply of nurses is fundamental to all of the National Health Priority disease areas where quality care cannot be delivered without an adequate number of motivated nurses. Designing cost-effective methods of retaining nurses requires understanding reasons why they leave the workforce and the impact this has on patient care and system costs. The findings will assist policy makers and workforce planner ....Patient and nurse outcomes and the cost of nurses' turnover in Australian hospitals. An adequate supply of nurses is fundamental to all of the National Health Priority disease areas where quality care cannot be delivered without an adequate number of motivated nurses. Designing cost-effective methods of retaining nurses requires understanding reasons why they leave the workforce and the impact this has on patient care and system costs. The findings will assist policy makers and workforce planners at both local and national levels, to design strategies to effectively recruit and retain nurses as demands for health care and market competition for staff both increase.Read moreRead less
Transforming Acute Hospital Care To Improve Outcomes For Stroke
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,350,000.00
Summary
Stroke is severely disabling but patients do not always receive the best care. I will lead rigorous research to improve stroke care in the emergency department and stroke units. I will help clinicians implement evidence-based stroke care, including protocols to manage fever, raised glucose and swallowing difficulties across Australia and internationally. Results will be relevant globally, informing strategies to drive practice change and improve patient outcomes.
Investigating consumer partnerships in the context of complex health service delivery. Whilst increased consumer participation has been demonstrated to improve health outcomes, there has been no translation to people with chronic illness using acute care services. People with chronic conditions represent an increasing proportion of health care consumers and due to the existence of co-morbidities their needs are usually complex. Despite this, they have been marginalised in the current development ....Investigating consumer partnerships in the context of complex health service delivery. Whilst increased consumer participation has been demonstrated to improve health outcomes, there has been no translation to people with chronic illness using acute care services. People with chronic conditions represent an increasing proportion of health care consumers and due to the existence of co-morbidities their needs are usually complex. Despite this, they have been marginalised in the current development of participatory models of service delivery. This project will investigate the determinants of participation for consumers during episodes of acute health care, identify barriers to their participation, and develop testable strategies for increasing effective consumer participation in acute health care services.Read moreRead less
Making nursing work: Developing a national framework for advanced practice in nursing. Advanced practice nursing (APN) is closing service gaps in delivery of health care across a range of settings for an aging population that is increasingly chronically ill. Development of APN has been rapid, resulting in confusion about the role and service potential. The lack of a common meaning of APN is prohibiting effective utilisation of the nursing workforce and causing confusion within nursing, the healt ....Making nursing work: Developing a national framework for advanced practice in nursing. Advanced practice nursing (APN) is closing service gaps in delivery of health care across a range of settings for an aging population that is increasingly chronically ill. Development of APN has been rapid, resulting in confusion about the role and service potential. The lack of a common meaning of APN is prohibiting effective utilisation of the nursing workforce and causing confusion within nursing, the health care industry and the community. The project aims to conduct the first nationwide study of advanced practice nurses, their clinical activities and service patterns. The research aims to develop new knowledge and professional tools and provide an evidence base for nursing workforce reform to meet the imperatives of contemporary health services.Read moreRead less
Communication During Hospitalisation: The Path To Better Healthcare
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$327,991.00
Summary
The aims of this research are to remove barriers to successful communication in hospital for people with no speech. Better communication in hospital will facilitate patient participation in health care decisions and reduce adverse experiences arising through poor communication. Project outcomes will lead to changes in policy and practice to improve the health care of patients in hospital, improve the health of Australians, and bring economic improvements through better care.
Randomised Trial Of Continuity Of Nursing Care In Vascular Surgery
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$190,648.00
Summary
Both overseas (Bruni, Hoosier-Paty and Hoffman 1996) and in Australia (Norman, Semmens, Laurence-Brown and Holman, under review), surgeons have become increasingly aware of the need to improve outcomes for patients undergoing arterial surgery for the lower limb. Unlike other areas of health care reform such as cardiac surgery or breast cancer, there is little confidence that the current links between acute facilities, community-based health services and general practice, work optimally together. ....Both overseas (Bruni, Hoosier-Paty and Hoffman 1996) and in Australia (Norman, Semmens, Laurence-Brown and Holman, under review), surgeons have become increasingly aware of the need to improve outcomes for patients undergoing arterial surgery for the lower limb. Unlike other areas of health care reform such as cardiac surgery or breast cancer, there is little confidence that the current links between acute facilities, community-based health services and general practice, work optimally together. Peripheral vascular disease is rarely studied. In NSW, there are about 4200 inpatient episodes for arterial surgery for ischaemia of the lower limb each year (AN-DRG 228 - 232), the majority involving older men. This study brings together a multi-disciplinary team of CIs comprising an academic nurse, two vascular surgeons and an expert in outcomes evaluation to conduct a randomised trial (n-586) of continuity of nursing care for patients admitted for arterial surgery of the lower limb. The intervention is comprised of a 'Patient Stay' Flowchart, continuing postoperative in-patient nursing assessment and staff consultation, Patient Education Discharge Booklet, Patient - Family Care Plan; proactive and reactive telephone follow-up and extensive GP liaison. Blinded outcome evaluation at six and twelve months will compare its differential effectiveness against usual care to which only the Patient Stay' Flowchart has been added. We will generate Level 2 evidence for the effectiveness of continuity of nursing care in improving outcomes for patients undergoing arterial surgery for ischaemia of the lower limb. To our knowledge, this would be the first Australian efficacy trial of its type.Read moreRead less
The impact of adding nursing support workers (assistants in nursing) to patient, nurse and system (ward) level outcomes. This project will identify the impact of adding nursing support workers on outcomes for patients (morbidity, mortality, quality of emotional care); staff (job satisfaction, intention to remain in the job); and the work environment (time spent in patient care, relationships with medical staff, staff experiences, leadership and support of workers).