跳到主要內容

很遺憾,我們無法支援你的瀏覽器。如果可以,請升級到新版本,或使用 Mozilla Firefox、Microsoft Edge、Google Chrome 或 Safari 14 或更新版本。如果無法升級,而且需要支援,請將你的回饋寄給我們。

我們衷心感謝你對這個新體驗的回饋。告訴我們你的想法 打開新的分頁/視窗

Elsevier
與我們共同出版
Connect

How to stop the nursing bleed on the frontlines

2023年5月11日

Robert Nieves, JD, MBA, MPA, BSN, RN

exhausted clinician resting on hospital floor

The ideal nurse-to-population ratio is 1:300 but the pandemic has caused a shortage of nurses which impacts severely on the quality of patient care. Yet the need to make quick, accurate, and reliable clinical decisions is more important than ever. What can be done to address this challenge?

Robert Nieves, Vice-President of Health Informatics at Elsevier, reveals the solutions being adopted by different countries, such as telehealth services. India, for example, with one of the highest nursing shortages, is ensuring digital readiness of healthcare institutions and access to evidence-based care plans through its National Digital Health Mission. With final-year nursing students and former nurse practitioners being encouraged to step up worldwide, healthcare institutions like St. Stephen’s Hospital in Australia are empowering them through tools such as Elsevier’s Clinical Skills.

Attracting new nurses and retaining talent is more vital than ever: measures, such as a South Korean medical centre’s programme for people interested in a career, and the Singapore government funding available to develop a culture of evidence-based nursing practice, are already proving highly successful.

More must be done to stop the nursing bleed rather than just stem it: but for nurses to have the tools required for quality patient-centred care and the opportunity to grow their careers, educational institutions, the government, and the private sector must work together...

貢獻者

black and white head shot of Robert Nieves

RNJMMBR

Robert Nieves, JD, MBA, MPA, BSN, RN

Vice President of Health Informatics

繼續閱讀 Robert Nieves, JD, MBA, MPA, BSN, RN