'Hospital-At-Night' Expedites Review of Trauma Patients Without Affecting Outcome from Hip Fracture (Clinical FEATURE) 'Hospital-At-Night' Expedites Review of Trauma Patients Without Affecting Outcome from Hip Fracture (Clinical FEATURE)

'Hospital-At-Night' Expedites Review of Trauma Patients Without Affecting Outcome from Hip Fracture (Clinical FEATURE‪)‬

Journal of Perioperative Practice 2011, Oct, 21, 10

    • 14,99 lei
    • 14,99 lei

Publisher Description

Introduction The Hospital at Night (H@N) programme was originally trialled in 2004 as a response to a reduction in UK junior doctors' hours in line with the European Working Time Directive (DH 2005a). It seeks to off-set this reduction by providing a centralised, multidisciplinary and multispecialty model of out-of-hours medical cover, congruent with the recent change to a medical shift pattern. Typical structures comprise a senior nurse practitioner (with an extended role incorporating patient assessment, prescribing and basic procedures) who receives, triages and delegates all requests for medical input across all specialties to the H@N team. This team is designed to possess the requisite skills for out of hours cover, and typically includes nurse practitioners, clinical support workers, and junior and senior medical staff. This is in contrast to more traditional models, which consist of medical staff alone who organise workloads independently. Access to more senior and specialist input is identical in both models. Perioperative care (particularly during out-of-hours periods when patients may be most vulnerable to deficiencies in care) is an important determinant of overall outcome. Consequently, the development and implementation of such programmes may have important implications for all those caring for the perioperative patient.

GENRE
Health & Well-Being
RELEASED
2011
1 October
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
18
Pages
PUBLISHER
Association for Perioperative Practice
SIZE
238.3
KB

More Books by Journal of Perioperative Practice

Surgical Care Practitioner Practice: One Team's Journey Explored (Clinical FEATURE) Surgical Care Practitioner Practice: One Team's Journey Explored (Clinical FEATURE)
2012
Reducing the Risk of Surgical Site Infection: A Case Controlled Study of Contamination of Theatre Clothing (Open LEARNING Zone) (Clinical Report) Reducing the Risk of Surgical Site Infection: A Case Controlled Study of Contamination of Theatre Clothing (Open LEARNING Zone) (Clinical Report)
2011
Evaluating the Effect of Music on Patient Anxiety During Minor Plastic Surgery (Clinical Feature) (Report) Evaluating the Effect of Music on Patient Anxiety During Minor Plastic Surgery (Clinical Feature) (Report)
2012
National Survey of Hand Antisepsis Practices (Clinical Feature) (Survey) National Survey of Hand Antisepsis Practices (Clinical Feature) (Survey)
2007
United States Operating Room Nurses: Work Environment Perceptions (Human RESOURCES) United States Operating Room Nurses: Work Environment Perceptions (Human RESOURCES)
2007
Post Anaesthetic Care Units in the Republic of Ireland: A Survey of Discharge Criteria (Clinical Feature) (Survey) Post Anaesthetic Care Units in the Republic of Ireland: A Survey of Discharge Criteria (Clinical Feature) (Survey)
2007