4.5 Article

Patient safety, quality of care and missed nursing care at a cardiology department during the COVID-19 outbreak

Journal

NURSING OPEN
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 385-393

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/nop2.1076

Keywords

cardiac nursing; nursing assessment; quality and safety; quality of care; questionnaire

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The study aimed to evaluate missed nursing care and patient safety during the COVID-19 pandemic in in-patient cardiology wards. Results showed that the COVID-19 sample reported more overtime hours and absence from work due to illness, as well as poorer perceptions of patient safety and care quality compared to the reference sample.
Aim: To evaluate missed nursing care and patient safety during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic at in-patient cardiology wards. Design: A cross-sectional design with a comparative approach. Method: Registered nurses and nurse assistants at a cardiology department were invited to answer the MISSCARE Survey-Swedish version, and questions on patient safety and quality of care during the COVID-19 pandemic. The data were compared with a reference sample. Results: A total of 43 registered nurses and nurse assistants in the COVID-19 sample and 59 in the reference sample participated. The COVID-19 sample reported significantly more overtime hours and more absence from work due to illness in comparison with the reference sample. The patient safety and quality of care were perceived significantly worse, 76.7% (N = 33) versus 94.7% (N = 54), and 85.7% (N = 36) versus 98.3% (N = 58, respectively. The COVID-19 sample reported more missed nursing care in wound care and in basic nursing.

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