Outcomes sensitive to nursing service quality in ambulatory cancer chemotherapy: systematic scoping review
Outcomes sensitive to nursing service quality in ambulatory cancer chemotherapy: systematic scoping review
Background: there is long standing interest in identifying patient outcomes that are sensitive to nursing care and an increasing number of systems that include outcomes in order to demonstrate or monitor the quality of nursing care.
Objective: we undertook scoping reviews of the literature in order to identify patient outcomes sensitive to the quality of nursing services in ambulatory cancer chemotherapy settings to guide the development of an outcomes based quality measurement system.
Methods: a 2 stage scoping review to identify potential outcome areas which were subsequently assessed for their sensitivity to nursing. Data sources included the Cochrane Library, Medline, Embase, the British Nursing Index, Google and Google scholar
Results: we identified a broad range of outcomes potentially sensitive to nursing. Individual trials support many nursing interventions but we found relatively little clear evidence of effect on outcomes derived from a systematic reviews and no evidence associating characteristics of nursing services with outcomes.
Conclusion: the purpose of identifying a set of outcomes as specifically nurse-sensitive for quality measurement is to give clear responsibility and create an expectation of strong clinical leadership by nurses in terms of monitoring and acting on results. It is important to select those outcomes that nurses have most impact upon. .Patient experience, nausea and vomiting, mucositis and safe medication administration were outcome areas most likely to yield sensitive measures of nursing service quality in ambulatory cancer chemotherapy
238-246
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Blackwell, Rebecca
adf1dd67-1b02-4d06-b2f9-b3a18e0f2277
July 2012
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Blackwell, Rebecca
adf1dd67-1b02-4d06-b2f9-b3a18e0f2277
Griffiths, Peter, Richardson, Alison and Blackwell, Rebecca
(2012)
Outcomes sensitive to nursing service quality in ambulatory cancer chemotherapy: systematic scoping review.
European Journal of Oncology Nursing, 16, .
(doi:10.1016/j.ejon.2011.06.004).
Abstract
Background: there is long standing interest in identifying patient outcomes that are sensitive to nursing care and an increasing number of systems that include outcomes in order to demonstrate or monitor the quality of nursing care.
Objective: we undertook scoping reviews of the literature in order to identify patient outcomes sensitive to the quality of nursing services in ambulatory cancer chemotherapy settings to guide the development of an outcomes based quality measurement system.
Methods: a 2 stage scoping review to identify potential outcome areas which were subsequently assessed for their sensitivity to nursing. Data sources included the Cochrane Library, Medline, Embase, the British Nursing Index, Google and Google scholar
Results: we identified a broad range of outcomes potentially sensitive to nursing. Individual trials support many nursing interventions but we found relatively little clear evidence of effect on outcomes derived from a systematic reviews and no evidence associating characteristics of nursing services with outcomes.
Conclusion: the purpose of identifying a set of outcomes as specifically nurse-sensitive for quality measurement is to give clear responsibility and create an expectation of strong clinical leadership by nurses in terms of monitoring and acting on results. It is important to select those outcomes that nurses have most impact upon. .Patient experience, nausea and vomiting, mucositis and safe medication administration were outcome areas most likely to yield sensitive measures of nursing service quality in ambulatory cancer chemotherapy
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YEJON-S-11-00032.pdf
- Author's Original
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Accepted/In Press date: February 2011
Published date: July 2012
Organisations:
Dynamics Group
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Local EPrints ID: 174295
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/174295
ISSN: 1462-3889
PURE UUID: 62b6f6e3-8fed-46b8-b569-8a59cc81039d
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Date deposited: 14 Feb 2011 08:43
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:56
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Author:
Rebecca Blackwell
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