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Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. / Lynne Grundy
Swansea University Author: Lynne Grundy
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Abstract
Background and Aims Nurses' roles, responsibilities and practice have changed and the boundaries between nursing and medicine have blurred. Few studies compare clinical outcomes of patients managed by Advanced Nurse Practitioners (ANPs) and junior doctors in acute secondary care. Aims of the st...
Published: |
2014
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Institution: | Swansea University |
Degree level: | Doctoral |
Degree name: | D.N.Sc |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42750 |
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2018-08-31T15:32:30.7932581 v2 42750 2018-08-02 Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. d5d9a4f39a2f0a65072bffd19e0647ae NULL Lynne Grundy Lynne Grundy true true 2018-08-02 Background and Aims Nurses' roles, responsibilities and practice have changed and the boundaries between nursing and medicine have blurred. Few studies compare clinical outcomes of patients managed by Advanced Nurse Practitioners (ANPs) and junior doctors in acute secondary care. Aims of the study were to identify any observable differences between ANPs undertaking traditional junior doctor roles and junior doctors in relation to senior doctor congruence with diagnosis and clinical management planning, and clinical assessment practices. Setting The study took place in an acute hospital in the UK from April 2009 to August 2010. Design and methods This was a retrospective review of clinical records of patients presenting to the emergency medicine division. Data were collected from 311 randomly selected case notes of patients presenting to 10 ANPs and 10 junior doctors. Data were analysed using bivariate and multivariate techniques in SPSS version 19. Analyses were repeated including only patients presenting to Acute Medical Assessment Unit (AMA). Findings Statistically significant findings included: patients presenting to junior doctors were older, had more co-existing problems and were prescribed more medicines before presentation. Patients presenting to ANPs were more likely to have chest pain. ANPs were less likely to prescribe medicines. Clinical management plans were less likely to be agreed for patients with more coexisting problems. There were few inter-professional differences in senior congruence with clinical management planning and diagnosis and clinical assessment practices. These findings are reassuring as nurses' work moves into what was formerly the medical domain. E-Thesis Nursing.;Medical personnel.;Health care management. 31 12 2014 2014-12-31 COLLEGE NANME Nursing COLLEGE CODE Swansea University Doctoral D.N.Sc 2018-08-31T15:32:30.7932581 2018-08-02T16:24:30.3361968 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Nursing Lynne Grundy NULL 1 0042750-02082018162519.pdf 10807519.pdf 2018-08-02T16:25:19.0230000 Output 11788084 application/pdf E-Thesis true 2018-08-02T16:25:19.0230000 false |
title |
Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. |
spellingShingle |
Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. Lynne Grundy |
title_short |
Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. |
title_full |
Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. |
title_fullStr |
Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. |
title_sort |
Crossing the boundaries: Nurses in the medical domain ; An examination of safety and outcomes in secondary care. |
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d5d9a4f39a2f0a65072bffd19e0647ae |
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d5d9a4f39a2f0a65072bffd19e0647ae_***_Lynne Grundy |
author |
Lynne Grundy |
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Lynne Grundy |
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E-Thesis |
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2014 |
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Swansea University |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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School of Health and Social Care - Nursing{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Nursing |
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description |
Background and Aims Nurses' roles, responsibilities and practice have changed and the boundaries between nursing and medicine have blurred. Few studies compare clinical outcomes of patients managed by Advanced Nurse Practitioners (ANPs) and junior doctors in acute secondary care. Aims of the study were to identify any observable differences between ANPs undertaking traditional junior doctor roles and junior doctors in relation to senior doctor congruence with diagnosis and clinical management planning, and clinical assessment practices. Setting The study took place in an acute hospital in the UK from April 2009 to August 2010. Design and methods This was a retrospective review of clinical records of patients presenting to the emergency medicine division. Data were collected from 311 randomly selected case notes of patients presenting to 10 ANPs and 10 junior doctors. Data were analysed using bivariate and multivariate techniques in SPSS version 19. Analyses were repeated including only patients presenting to Acute Medical Assessment Unit (AMA). Findings Statistically significant findings included: patients presenting to junior doctors were older, had more co-existing problems and were prescribed more medicines before presentation. Patients presenting to ANPs were more likely to have chest pain. ANPs were less likely to prescribe medicines. Clinical management plans were less likely to be agreed for patients with more coexisting problems. There were few inter-professional differences in senior congruence with clinical management planning and diagnosis and clinical assessment practices. These findings are reassuring as nurses' work moves into what was formerly the medical domain. |
published_date |
2014-12-31T03:53:34Z |
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1763752662703013888 |
score |
11.037056 |