Student nurses, increasing placement capacity and patient safety. A retrospective cohort study

One solution to the global nursing shortage is to increase the numbers of student nurses: clinical placements need to increase their capacity to host them. Capacity increases have previously been viewed as problematic if they increase the supervisory burden on registered nurses, and unsafe if they d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nurse education in practice 2020-10, Vol.48 (C), p.102889-102889, Article 102889
Hauptverfasser: Williamson, Graham R., Kane, Adele, Bunce, Jane
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creator Williamson, Graham R.
Kane, Adele
Bunce, Jane
description One solution to the global nursing shortage is to increase the numbers of student nurses: clinical placements need to increase their capacity to host them. Capacity increases have previously been viewed as problematic if they increase the supervisory burden on registered nurses, and unsafe if they dilute students’ supervision. The aim of this study was to assess the impact on specific patient safety measures (pressure ulcers, falls and medications errors) of having students in placement being educated in Collaborative Learning in Practice (which increases capacity) compared to when they were not. Audit data were collected from four NHS trusts in the South West of England in a retrospective cohort study. We received data on 5532 adverse events from 15 clinical areas in four NHS trusts, with 996 students on placement between January 2018 and August 2019. The risk ratio and mean differences for adverse patient events were favourable (RR = 0.9842; 95%CI 0.9604–1.008; mean difference 279, 95%CI 213–346, p = 0.01). There was no statistically significant correlation between increased student numbers and increased adverse patient events. Our data must be interpreted with caution, but we conclude that increasing capacity for student nurses in placements appears to have a positive impact on patient safety. •We examined the impact of increasing student numbers in placement.•We used adverse patient events: falls, pressure ulcers and medications errors.•Increasing student numbers in placement reduces the risk of adverse patient events.•There was a statistically significant impact.•Increasing student numbers appears not to be unsafe.
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A retrospective cohort study</atitle><jtitle>Nurse education in practice</jtitle><addtitle>Nurse Educ Pract</addtitle><date>2020-10</date><risdate>2020</risdate><volume>48</volume><issue>C</issue><spage>102889</spage><epage>102889</epage><pages>102889-102889</pages><artnum>102889</artnum><issn>1471-5953</issn><eissn>1873-5223</eissn><abstract>One solution to the global nursing shortage is to increase the numbers of student nurses: clinical placements need to increase their capacity to host them. Capacity increases have previously been viewed as problematic if they increase the supervisory burden on registered nurses, and unsafe if they dilute students’ supervision. The aim of this study was to assess the impact on specific patient safety measures (pressure ulcers, falls and medications errors) of having students in placement being educated in Collaborative Learning in Practice (which increases capacity) compared to when they were not. 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subjects Algorithms
Career Planning
Clinical nursing
Clinical placements
Cohort analysis
Cohort study
Collaboration
Collaborative learning
Critical incidents
Data Analysis
Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate
England
Health education
Health services
Humans
Learning
Medical errors
Mortality
Nurses
Nursing
Nursing education
Nursing Students
Patient Safety
Pressure ulcers
R&D
Research & development
Research Methodology
Retrospective Studies
Safety measures
Student nurses
Students
Students, Nursing
Surveys and Questionnaires
Trusts
Ulcers
Unsafe
Workforce planning
title Student nurses, increasing placement capacity and patient safety. A retrospective cohort study
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