nursing jobs, careers, and e-learning/training Employers, Healthcare Firms: Subscribe Now, Post Your Job Openings, Search Resumes, Find Candidates Nursing Job Search Post Your Nursing Resume               
  Nursing Jobs, Learning Resources, Career Tools


Forums 24x7

Calendar

News Articles

Focus Areas

Links & Resources

Bookstore

Free Magazines



  Print This Page


Hospital experience, nursing major factors


UPI
July 26, 2005

HOUSTON, July 25 (UPI) -- Research suggests careful selection of a hospital with a high nurse-to-patient ratio helps reduce post-operative complications after some cancer surgeries.

The research ers said selection of a hospital that either performs many cystectomies --the surgical removal of the urinary bladder -- or has a high nurse-to-patient ratio reduced post-operative mortality and complications by up to 75 percent.

Led by Linda Elting of the University of Texas' M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, researchers investigated the relationship between hospitals' procedure volume and post-operative mortality and morbidity. They also analyzed data for hospital-related risk factors to help explain that relationship.

They found about one in eights patients (12 percent) had post-operative complications and about one in 45 (2.2 percent) died. But hospitals performing more than 10 cystectomies annually showed mortality reduced by nearly 75 percent and complications reduced by approximately 50 percent at the high-volume hospitals.

But hospitals with a high nurse-to-patient ratio reduced post-operative mortality by more than 50 percent, regardless of the hospital's cystectomy volume.

The study appears in the journal CANCER.


Print This Page

About hireNursing  ::  Copyright  ::  Privacy  ::  Legal  ::  Contact