Introduction: Nurses frequently innovate in response to operational failures, regulations, procedures, and/or other workflow barriers that prevent them from delivering high-quality patient care. Unfortunately, most nurse innovations do not diffuse to a broader audience, depriving other nurses from taking advantage of solutions that have already been developed elsewhere. This under-diffusion is problematic from a societal and welfare point of view. The goal of this paper is to understand how diffusion shortage of nurse innovations can be reduced. Methods: We develop a qualitative case study of a medical makerspace at the largest academic hospital in the Netherlands. This medical makerspace reported unusually high rates of nurse innovation di...
Innovation often flourishes in organizational pockets, but then fails to diffuse more widely. This ...
There continue to be suggestions within the nursing literature that research findings are not being ...
Medical innovations, in the form of new medication or other clinical practices, evolve and spread th...
Introduction: Nurses frequently innovate in response to operational failures, regulations, procedure...
IntroductionNurses frequently innovate in response to operational failures, regulations, procedures,...
IntroductionNurses frequently innovate in response to operational failures, regulations, procedures,...
Background: Innovation adoption and diffusion (IAD) in healthcare refers to the essential process of...
Innovative practices in the nursing field are being developed rapidly and are supported by evidence-...
Funding for nursing research has increased the number of studies but no corresponding increase in ap...
Based on a literature review and interviews with clinical nurse specialists, this study considers in...
Literature on continuing education for members of the health professions has stressed that understan...
This study was conducted, based on E. M. Rogers\u27 diffusion theory, on the diffusion of nursing pr...
To innovate is to bring forward positive change for a population of people who are affected by a per...
This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund - Copyright @ 2011 Bar...
Copyright 2011 Drennan and Goodman; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article dist...
Innovation often flourishes in organizational pockets, but then fails to diffuse more widely. This ...
There continue to be suggestions within the nursing literature that research findings are not being ...
Medical innovations, in the form of new medication or other clinical practices, evolve and spread th...
Introduction: Nurses frequently innovate in response to operational failures, regulations, procedure...
IntroductionNurses frequently innovate in response to operational failures, regulations, procedures,...
IntroductionNurses frequently innovate in response to operational failures, regulations, procedures,...
Background: Innovation adoption and diffusion (IAD) in healthcare refers to the essential process of...
Innovative practices in the nursing field are being developed rapidly and are supported by evidence-...
Funding for nursing research has increased the number of studies but no corresponding increase in ap...
Based on a literature review and interviews with clinical nurse specialists, this study considers in...
Literature on continuing education for members of the health professions has stressed that understan...
This study was conducted, based on E. M. Rogers\u27 diffusion theory, on the diffusion of nursing pr...
To innovate is to bring forward positive change for a population of people who are affected by a per...
This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund - Copyright @ 2011 Bar...
Copyright 2011 Drennan and Goodman; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article dist...
Innovation often flourishes in organizational pockets, but then fails to diffuse more widely. This ...
There continue to be suggestions within the nursing literature that research findings are not being ...
Medical innovations, in the form of new medication or other clinical practices, evolve and spread th...