Skip to main content

Home/ Emory Becoming an APRN/ Group items matching ""patient satisfaction"" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
kzoda26

Outcomes of adding acute care nurse practitioners to a Level I trauma service with the goal of decreased length of stay and improved physician and nursing satisfaction - 2 views

  •  
    BACKGROUND: The trauma service experienced preventable delays caused by an Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education work restrictions and a 16% increase in patient census. Furthermore, nurses needed a consistently accessible provider for the coordination of care. We hypothesized that using experienced acute care nurse practitioners (ACNPs) on the stepdown unit would improve throughput and decrease length of stay (LOS) and hospital charges. Moreover, we hypothesized that adding ACNPs would improve staff satisfaction. On December 1, 2011, the Vanderbilt University Medical Center Division of Trauma reassigned ACNPs to the stepdown area 5 days a week for a pilot program. METHODS: LOS data from December 1, 2011 through December 1, 2012 was compared with data from the same months from the previous two years and estimated hospital charges and patient days were extrapolated. Physician and nursing surveys were performed. Data from 2010 (n = 2,559) and 2011 (n= 2,671) were averaged and the mean LOS for the entire trauma service was 7.2 days. After adding an experienced ACNP, the average LOS decreased to 6.4 days, a 0.8 day reduction. Per patient, there was a $ 9,111.50 savings in hospital charges, for a reduction of $27.8 million dollars in hospital charges over the 12 month pilot program. RESULTS: A confidential survey administered to attending physicians showed that 100% agreed that a nurse practitioner in the stepdown area was beneficial and helped throughput. Dayshift nurses were surveyed, and 100% agreed or strongly agreed that the ACNPs were knowledgeable about the patient's plan of care, experienced in the care of trauma patients, and improved patient care overall. CONCLUSION: The addition of experienced ACNPs resulted in the decrease of overall trauma service LOS, saving almost $9 million in hospital charges
cdchongo

Advanced Practice Nurse Outcomes 1990-2008: A Systematic Review - 5 views

  •  
    This article asks the question: "Compared to other providers (physicians or teams without APRNs), are APRN patient outcomes of care similar?" The study is specific to USA and includes data regarding NPs, CNRAs, and CNMs. Outcomes were determined by the following: patient satisfaction with provider/care, patient self-assessment of perceived health status, functional status, blood glucose, serum lipids, blood pressure, emergency department visits, hospitalization, duration of ventilation, length of stay, and mortality (p9).
atmaror

Comparison of patient outcomes based on the provider type: primary care nurse practitio... - 0 views

This is an article where the results of a randomized trial on patient outcomes depending on the type of provider (NP vs. MD) are discussed. Over a 2 year-follow-up, patient outcomes (including pati...

APRN Practice Primary Healthcare_Standards Outcomes assessment Health services research Comparative study

started by atmaror on 23 Sep 16 no follow-up yet
marklamb7

The impact of nurse practitioner services on cost, quality of care, satisfaction and waiting times in the emergency department- A systematic review.pdf - 1 views

shared by marklamb7 on 22 Sep 16 - No Cached
  •  
    Systematic review of literature on the impact of Nurse Practitioners in Emergency Departments. Limited evidence of high quality. Most high quality evidence conducted in English speaking countries outside the U.S. Evidence suggests NPs in EDs associated with quality care, improved patient satisfaction, reduced wait times. Insufficient evidence related to cost-effectiveness. #BecomingAPRN16
bnichola168

Autonomy of nurse practitioners in primary care: An integrative review - 0 views

shared by bnichola168 on 27 Aug 17 - No Cached
  •  
    This article discusses the benefits and pit-falls to autonomous primary care Nurse practitioner practice and advocates for cost effective improvements to our healthcare system. The research suggests that Nurse practitioners who practice independently report greater job satisfaction, improved patient outcomes and provide low cost, high quality services that are equal or superior to primary care physicians. Unfortunately, current healthcare reimbursement models, policies and reluctant physicians have created barriers to autonomous NP practices. The author suggests that autonomous practice requires further research across the U.S, the establishment of a well-defined model and the evaluation of patient outcomes, in order to determine whether the present day Nurse Practitioner requires future collaborative agreements with physicians, in order to provide quality patient care across the United States.
Madison Olkes

The Role Of Nurse Practitioners In Reinventing Primary Care - 0 views

  •  
    This article focuses on the Nurse Practitioners contribution to primary care. Randomized trials were performed to help us better understand how Nurse Practitioners compare to Primary Care Physicians in the eyes of patients. Conclusions showed that patients outcomes were equivalent in their satisfaction, physical, social and emotional functioning when compared to seeing a Physician versus a Nurse Practitioner. It was also found during the studies that lower costs of care was associated with NP's.
samperilli

Quality of Primary Care by Advanced Practice Nurses: A Systematic Review - 2 views

This article reviews the quality of primary care delivered by APRN's compared to physicians. Overall, APRN's demonstrated equal to or better outcomes than physician group for physiologic measures,...

http:__www.medscape.com_viewarticle_851933

started by samperilli on 27 Aug 17 no follow-up yet
fgglenn6

Impact of NP's in the Emergency Room - 2 views

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002074891400176X This article is a systemic review of the impact Nurse Practitioners have in an ER setting on the cost, quality of care, wait time...

started by fgglenn6 on 02 Sep 17 no follow-up yet
Brittany Johnson

Effect of crew resource management training in a multidisciplinary obstetrical setting. - 2 views

http://intqhc.oxfordjournals.org/content/20/4/254.long This article focused on implementing a crew resource management training for their staff of L&D nurses, OB physicians, anesthesia team, midwi...

teamwork

started by Brittany Johnson on 04 Oct 15 no follow-up yet
celenetan

Meeting the Needs of New Graduate NPs - 7 views

  •  
    The transition of newly graduated nurse practitioners (NPs) into practice can be challenging for the employer and the NPs. A new-graduate residency model for NPs along with evaluative criteria is presented from a primary care setting. Residency models are of benefit for new-graduate NPs to ease the transition to practice and promote patient care quality, and nurse retention, and satisfaction.
katyabrickman

Survey Shows Consumers Open To A Greater Role For Physician Assistants And Nurse Practitioners - 3 views

  •  
    Great resource for information regarding patient's opinions towards seeing APRNs.
cchunter1991

Rethinking the Primary Care Workforce - An Expanded Role for Nurses - 1 views

This article discusses the current decline in the number of primary care physicians and the ever-growing need for APRNs in the primary care setting. With 84% more primary care NPs between 2010 and ...

APRN practice Scope Transition

started by cchunter1991 on 27 Aug 17 no follow-up yet
1 - 12 of 12
Showing 20 items per page