Background: Nurses’ ‘worry’ is used as a calling criterion in many Rapid Response Systems, however it is valued inconsistently. Furthermore, barriers to call the Rapid Response Team can cause delay in escalating care. The literature identifies nine indicators which trigger nurses to worry about a patient's condition.Objectives: The objective of this study is to determine the significance of nurses’ ‘worry’ and/or indicators underlying ‘worry’ to predict unplanned Intensive-Care/High-Dependency-Unit admission or unexpected mortality among surgical ward patients.Design: a prospective cohort study.Setting: a 500-bed tertiary University affiliated teaching hospital.Participants: Adult, native speaking surgical patients, admitted to three surgic...
Background: '. Failure to rescue' - death after a treatable complication - is used as a nursing sens...
Objectives.The primary objective of the study was to determine which professional, situational and p...
Background: Most adverse events in hospitalised patients are often preceded by documented progressiv...
AbstractBackgroundNurses’ ‘worry’ is used as a calling criterion in many Rapid Response Systems, how...
Contains fulltext : 171075.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Nur...
Background: Rapid response systems aim to improve early recognition and treatment of deteriorating g...
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To determine the predictive value of individual and combined dutch-early-nurse-...
BACKGROUND: Rapid response systems aim to improve early recognition and treatment of deteriorating g...
INTRODUCTION:Nurses often recognize deterioration in patients through intuition rather than through ...
Contains fulltext : 153532.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)INTRODUCTION: N...
Objective: Early warning systems (EWSs) are an integral part of processes that aim to improve the ea...
Abstract Background The early warning score (EWS) was developed to identify deteriorating patients e...
Background: nurses are required to recognise early clinical deterioration in patients and call emerg...
Early Warning Scores (EWSs) are based on the assumption that critical illness is preceded by physica...
Abstract Background: ‘Failure to rescue’ - death after a treatable complication - is used as a nursi...
Background: '. Failure to rescue' - death after a treatable complication - is used as a nursing sens...
Objectives.The primary objective of the study was to determine which professional, situational and p...
Background: Most adverse events in hospitalised patients are often preceded by documented progressiv...
AbstractBackgroundNurses’ ‘worry’ is used as a calling criterion in many Rapid Response Systems, how...
Contains fulltext : 171075.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Nur...
Background: Rapid response systems aim to improve early recognition and treatment of deteriorating g...
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To determine the predictive value of individual and combined dutch-early-nurse-...
BACKGROUND: Rapid response systems aim to improve early recognition and treatment of deteriorating g...
INTRODUCTION:Nurses often recognize deterioration in patients through intuition rather than through ...
Contains fulltext : 153532.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)INTRODUCTION: N...
Objective: Early warning systems (EWSs) are an integral part of processes that aim to improve the ea...
Abstract Background The early warning score (EWS) was developed to identify deteriorating patients e...
Background: nurses are required to recognise early clinical deterioration in patients and call emerg...
Early Warning Scores (EWSs) are based on the assumption that critical illness is preceded by physica...
Abstract Background: ‘Failure to rescue’ - death after a treatable complication - is used as a nursi...
Background: '. Failure to rescue' - death after a treatable complication - is used as a nursing sens...
Objectives.The primary objective of the study was to determine which professional, situational and p...
Background: Most adverse events in hospitalised patients are often preceded by documented progressiv...