Literature DB >> 25251175

Impact of lung cancer clinical nurse specialists on emergency admissions.

Alison Leary1, Jane Baxter.   

Abstract

Clinical nurse specialists (CNS) in cancer perform a range of complex activities, including the management of care. However, they often report a high administrative burden for services, which makes providing expert nursing care challenging. Administrative work for a service can be seen as a priority for non-nurses, yet a high administrative burden allows less time for complex nursing care. A London trust admitted a mean of four lung cancer patients per month for symptom control in progressive disease or end-of-life care, with a mean stay of 6 days. This was often a default location: the acute hospital was not always the patient's preferred place of care for end of life. The CNS negotiated away the administrative burden, which occupied 38% of their working time, and adopted standard proactive case management in line with national standards. The CNS were also able to build a collaborative relationship with others, such as local GPs and community palliative care teams. Their proactive and vigilant case management resulted in fewer admissions for non-acute problems: a mean of four emergency admissions per month fell to a mean of fewer than one (0.3). For this service, the mean length of emergency admission was 6 days, so a reduction in the admission rate represented a significant saving in bed days (266 a year) and a higher rate of achieving the preferred place of end-of-life care. In conclusion, CNS who practise proactive case management and refocus services in line with best practice represent a good return on investment (ROI).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Admission avoidance; Clinical nurse specialists; Outcomes; Value

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25251175     DOI: 10.12968/bjon.2014.23.17.935

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Nurs        ISSN: 0966-0461


  1 in total

1.  Using patient-reported outcome measures to deliver enhanced supportive care to people with lung cancer: feasibility and acceptability of a nurse-led consultation model.

Authors:  Grigorios Kotronoulas; Constantina Papadopoulou; Mhairi F Simpson; John McPhelim; Lynn Mack; Roma Maguire
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2018-05-19       Impact factor: 3.603

  1 in total

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