4.5 Article

Initial testing of the use of the Safer Nursing Care Tool in a Canadian acute care context

Journal

JOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT
Volume 29, Issue 6, Pages 1801-1808

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jonm.13300

Keywords

patient dependency; acuity; safe‐ nursing staffing; Safer Nursing Care Tool

Funding

  1. McGill Nursing Collaborative for Education and Innovation in Patient and Family - Centered Care (Newton Foundation/JGH Foundation)

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The study tested the use of England's Safer Nursing Care Tool in a Canadian hospital, showing that the tool can be applied in this setting. Differences were found in bed occupancy and patient dependency/acuity between UK and Canadian wards, but overall staff activity was comparable.
Aim Initial testing of England's Safer Nursing Care Tool for adult in-patient acute care wards in a university-affiliated Canadian hospital. Background Safe-nursing staffing decisions have significant impacts on patients' safety and quality of care. The Safer Nursing Care Tool was developed in England to provide managers with a validated formula for making appropriate nursing staffing decisions. The tool has been widely used and studied in the UK but has yet to be tested in a Canadian context. Method Ten high service quality acute care wards from a university-affiliated Canadian hospital tested the use of the Safer Nursing Care Tool. Service quality, patients' dependency/acuity and staff activity data were benchmarked against information collected in 726 comparable UK wards. Results Higher bed occupancy and patient dependency/acuity mix were found in the 10 Canadian wards compared to their UK counterparts. Overall staff activity was comparable between UK and Canadian wards. Conclusion The Safer Nursing Care Tool can be applied in this Canadian hospital, and further testing in other hospitals and specialties is required. Implication for Nursing Management The Safer Nursing Care Tool is a valid staffing tool to use that, when combined with professional judgement, can help managers to properly establish nursing staff in acute care wards.

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