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Hiring
one extra nurse might help hospitals save
lives
Newswise — If hospitals added one more
full-time registered nurse on staff to care
for patients, the number of hospital-related
deaths in the United States could decrease
significantly, according to a new review.
However, cost concerns and a worsening
nursing shortage might make this an unlikely
scenario.
When asked how hospital administrators can
be better made aware of these possible rates
of improved patient outcomes, lead review
author Robert Kane, M.D., said, “The issue
is not making them aware of the possibility,
it’s convincing them that it is in their
best interests to act on it.
From a business perspective, the savings in
reduced lengths of stay would not offset the
costs of the added staffing. The case would
have to be made in terms of image and
liability.”
The systematic review aimed to examine
whether there was a link between a
hospital’s registered nurse-to-patient ratio
and the health outcome of the patients under
their care.
Kane, of the University of Minnesota School
of Public Health, and colleagues write that
“nurses are crucial to providing
high-quality care,” and “increasing the
nurse-to-patient ratios has been recommended
as a means to improve patient safety.”
The review appears in the December issue of
the journal Medical Care.
The researchers evaluated 27 studies of
patient outcomes in relation to the
registered nurse-to-patient ratio. Per
shift, RN staffing averaged about three
patients per RN in intensive care units,
four patients per RN on surgical units and
four patients per RN for medical patients.
Registered nurse staffing ratios came from
the American Hospital Association and other
nursing surveys.
The studies included in the review used data
on patient outcome rates from sources such
as the Uniform Health Discharge Data Sets
and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services databases.
Kane and fellow reviewers found that a
greater number of RNs on staff was
associated with a reduction in the number of
hospital-related deaths and other negative
outcomes. Their results showed that by
increasing the number of full-time RNs on
staff per day by one, there were 9 percent
fewer hospital-related deaths in intensive
care units, 16 percent fewer in surgical
patients and 6 percent fewer deaths in
medical patients.
For every 1,000 hospitalized patients, the
reviewers estimated that an increase by one
full-time RN per patient day could save five
patient lives in intensive care units, five
lives on medical floors and six surgical
patient lives.
Moreover, increasing staffing by one RN per
patient day resulted in lower rates of
hospital-acquired pneumonia, respiratory
failure and cardiac arrest in intensive care
units. Patients’ length of stay in the
hospital was also shorter by 34 percent in
intensive care units and by 31 percent in
surgical units.
The review acknowledges that while increased
nurse-patient ratios can lead to better
patient outcomes, it is difficult to
maintain a reasonable number of RNs on staff
in light of the current shortage of
available RNs.
“A sufficient supply of nurses is critical
to providing our nation’s population with
quality health care as these studies note;
yet, hospitals are currently facing a
nursing shortage,” agreed Jo Ann Webb,
senior director of federal relations and
policy for the American Organization of
Nurse Executives. “This need will only be
exacerbated in the coming years to
accommodate growing patient needs and to
replace retiring nurses.”
“The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics has
projected that by 2014, our nation will need
an additional 1.2 million new and
replacement nurses,” Webb said.
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