メインのコンテンツにスキップする

申し訳ございませんが、お客様のブラウザには完全に対応しておりませんオプションがありましたら、新しいバージョンにアップグレードするか、 Mozilla Firefox、 Microsoft Edge、Google Chrome、またはSafari 14以降をお使いください。これらが利用できない場合、またサポートが必要な場合は、フィードバックをお送りください。

この新ホームページへのフィードバックを歓迎します。ご意見をお寄せください 新しいタブ/ウィンドウで開く

Elsevier
論文を投稿する
Connect

Tackling the worsening nursing shortage with technology, training, and transformation

2023年10月25日

Tim Morris別

An Asian woman nurse checks patient charts on a digital tablet while her colleague tends to a patient in the background.

Getty Images via FD Trade.

Delve into holistic strategies addressing Asia's nursing shortage and care challenges

As the aging population increases in Asia, so does the dependency on nurses – especially specialist ones. And yet the shortage of nurses, due to factors such as burnout and increasingly complex care, continues. The key to attracting and retaining nurses cannot lie alone in offering better pay or job redesign, believes Tim Morris, Vice President, Go-to-Market, EMEALAAP, Elsevier.

He supports a holistic strategy and sets out viable options that include having a strong scope of practice with good regulations in place across the different care and nursing roles. While technology can improve nursing efficiencies, it may not reduce the workload enough – Morris explains the need to have a more user-friendly EMR and the importance of integrating care planning to support learning and quality of care. He also reveals ways in which Elsevier solutions, such as Shadow Health®, have successfully helped with continuous professional development.

Despite the role of nurses and the use of technology evolving, one thing remains unchanged: nursing is still about caring and improving outcomes for patients. More must be done to reverse the nursing shortage – the options Morris outlines all have real potential.