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Nurses' perception of implicit nursing care rationing in Croatia—A cross‐sectional multicentre study
Journal of Nursing Management, 2020To examine Croatian nurses' perception of implicit nursing care rationing and the patient safety culture from the perspective of acute care hospital staff.In the past three decades, the Croatian health system has undergone numerous transformations driven by geopolitical, legal, financial, demographic, scientific and technological progress.
Adriano Friganovic +8 more
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Rationing of Nursing Care Within Professional Environmental Constraints
Clinical Nursing Research, 2013The purpose of this study was to examine rationing of nursing care and the possible relationship between nurses’ perceptions of their professional practice environment and care rationing. A total of 393 nurses from medical and surgical units participated in the study.
Papastavrou, Evridiki +4 more
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Unfinished nursing care, missed care, and implicitly rationed care: State of the science review
International Journal of Nursing Studies, 2015The purposes of this review of unfinished care were to: (1) compare conceptual definitions and frameworks associated with unfinished care and related synonyms (i.e. missed care, implicitly rationed care; and care left undone); (2) compare and contrast approaches to instrumentation; (3) describe prevalence and patterns; (4) identify antecedents and ...
Terry L. Jones +2 more
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Rationing of nursing care and nurse–patient outcomes: a systematic review of quantitative studies
The International Journal of Health Planning and Management, 2013SUMMARYBedside rationing in nursing care refers to withholding or failure to carry out certain aspects of care because of limited resources such as time, staffing or skill mix. The absence of previous systematic reviews on nursing care rationing leads to a gap of synthesized knowledge on the factors and processes related to rationing and the potential ...
Papastavrou, Evridiki +2 more
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The ethical dimension of nursing care rationing
Nursing Ethics, 2014Background: In the face of scarcity, nurses may inevitably delay or omit some nursing interventions and give priority to others. This increases the risk of adverse patient outcomes and threatens safety, quality, and dignity in care. However, it is not clear if there is an ethical element in nursing care rationing and how nurses experience the ...
Vryonides, Stavros +4 more
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Resource Allocation and Rationing in Nursing Care
2017Public discussion of resourcing in health care tend to compound ideas of resource allocation and rationing. Public debate also tends to focus on situations of scarcity such as lack of kidneys or hearts for transplantation, or heated arguments regarding whether the latest very expensive new drug should be made available, regardless of cost, to treat ...
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Rationing of Nursing Care: An International and Multidimensional Problem
2019Rationing of nursing care occurs when resources are insufficient to provide necessary care to all patients. This may be a result of reduced staff numbers, skill mix variation, increased demands for care or a changing patient profile. It is a result of a policy decision making by nurse managers who are faced with reduced resources while striving to ...
António Casa Nova +2 more
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The ethical complexities of nursing care rationing
2017Recent studies into nursing care rationing indicate that nurses always ration their time and care, resulting to serious threats to the quality of care and patient safety. For example patient mobilization, hygiene, feeding, communication, patient support, teaching and discharge planning, surveillance and care documentation are regularly lacking or ...
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Ration Nursing Care—And Patients Pay
International Journal of Trauma Nursing, 2000openaire +2 more sources

