Artigo Revisado por pares

The Association Between Nursing Factors and Patient Mortality in the Veterans Health Administration

2008; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 46; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/mlr.0b013e3181791a0a

ISSN

1537-1948

Autores

Anne Sales, NANCY SHARP, Yu-Fang Li, Elliott Lowy, Gwendolyn T. Greiner, Chuan‐Fen Liu, Anna C. Alt‐White, Cathy Rick, Julie Sochalski, Pamela H. Mitchell, Gary J. Rosenthal, Cheryl B. Stetler, Paulette Cournoyer, Jack Needleman,

Tópico(s)

Nursing education and management

Resumo

Nurse staffing is not the same across an entire hospital. Nursing care is delivered in geographically-based units, with wide variation in staffing levels. In particular, staffing in intensive care is much richer than in nonintensive care acute units.To evaluate the association of in-hospital patient mortality with registered nurse staffing and skill mix comparing hospital and unit level analysis using data from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA).A retrospective observational study using administrative data from 129,579 patients from 453 nursing units (171 ICU and 282 non-ICU) in 123 VHA hospitals.We used hierarchical multilevel regression models to adjust for patient, unit, and hospital characteristics, stratifying by whether or not patients had an ICU stay during admission.In-hospital mortality.: Of the 129,579 patients, mortality was 2.9% overall: 6.7% for patients with an ICU stay compared with 1.6% for those without. Whether the analysis was done at the hospital or unit level affected findings. RN staffing was not significantly associated with in-hospital mortality for patients with an ICU stay (OR, 1.02; 95% CI, 0.99-1.03). For non-ICU patients, increased RN staffing was significantly associated with decreased mortality risk (OR, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.86-0.96). RN education was not significantly associated with mortality.Our findings suggest that the association between RN staffing and skill mix and in-hospital patient mortality depends on whether the analysis is conducted at the hospital or unit level. Variable staffing on non-ICU units may significantly contribute to in-hospital mortality risk.

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