51. Failure to Rescue
- Author
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Leslie A. Hoffman, Gail A. Wolf, Michael A. DeVita, Mary Beth Happ, and Andrea Schmid
- Subjects
Patient Transfer ,Research design ,Failure to rescue ,Leadership and Management ,Resuscitation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Personnel Staffing and Scheduling ,Staffing ,Psychological intervention ,MEDLINE ,Workload ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Nurse's Role ,Nursing ,Intervention (counseling) ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Professional Autonomy ,Hospital Mortality ,Nurse Administrators ,Quality Indicators, Health Care ,media_common ,business.industry ,Data Collection ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Heart Arrest ,Intensive Care Units ,Nursing Administration Research ,Research Design ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Medical emergency ,Emergencies ,business ,Autonomy - Abstract
Rapid response teams have been advocated as an intervention to reduce failure to rescue events. Such teams can improve nurse autonomy and control to rescue patients deteriorating in a medical surgical setting. The purpose of this review is to enhance nurse executives' understanding of failure to rescue as a nurse sensitive outcome, tested interventions, and implications for future research. The emergence of failure to rescue as an outcome measure will be initially discussed. Research regarding the relationship between failure to rescue and registered nurse staffing as well as research examining the potential to reduce failure-to-rescue events will be explored.
- Published
- 2007
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