| Literature DB >> 36223964 |
Abdulazeez Imam1,2, Sopuruchukwu Obiesie3, Jalemba Aluvaala4,5, Jackson Michuki Maina4, David Gathara6,7, Mike English4,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To identify nurse staffing and patient care outcome literature in published systematic reviews and map out the evidence gaps for low/middle-income countries (LMICs).Entities:
Keywords: Health & safety; Health policy; PUBLIC HEALTH; Quality in health care
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36223964 PMCID: PMC9562716 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-064050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 3.006
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses diagram for search.
An overview of the included systematic reviews showing the review objective and geographical locations where the reviews of primary studies were conducted
| First author (year) | Period of review | Research setting | Number of primary studies included | Number of primary studies describing nurse staffing levels and patient outcomes in non-ICU settings* | Geographical locations of studies and frequency | Number of low/middle-income countries included (%) | Number of high-income countries included (%) |
| Griffiths (2018) | 2006–2016 | Adult hospital inpatient wards | 18 | 17 | Kuwait: 1, Europe: 3, UK: 1, Sweden: 1, USA†: 7, Lebanon†: 1, Switzerland: 1, Italy: 1, South Korea: 2 | 1 (5.6) | 17 (95.4) |
| Assaye (2020) | UR– 2019 | Acute care hospital settings | 27 | 6 | Brazil: 1, Thailand: 2, China: 1, Ethiopia: 1, Lebanon: 1 | 6 (100.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Thungjaroenkul (2007) | 1990–2006 | ICUs, medical and surgical units | 17 | 5 | USA: 5 | 0 (0.0) | 5 (100.0) |
| Twigg (2021) | 2000–2020 | General medical, surgical, step-down units, emergency departments, intensive care and nursing homes | 22 | 7 | USA: 6, Australia: 1 | 0 (0.0) | 7 (100.0) |
| Shin (2019) | 2000–2018 | Medical and surgical units | 19 | 17 | USA: 10, South Korea: 2, Finland†: 1, Netherlands†: 1, | 2 (11.1) | 16 (88.9) |
| Lang (2004)‡ | 1980–2003 | Acute care hospitals | 43 | 24 | USA: 24 | 0 (0.0) | 24 (100.0) |
| Lankshear (2005) | 1990–2004 | Acute care hospitals | 22 | 19 | USA: 18, Canada: 1 | 0 (0.0) | 19 (100.0) |
| Kane (2007) | 1990–2006 | Acute care hospitals | 28 | 17 | USA: 17 | 0 (0.0) | 17 (100.0) |
| Bourgon (2019) | 1996–2018 | Surgical units | 44 | 28 | USA: 17, Europe: 2, South Korea: 1, UK: 2, New Zealand: 1, Australia: 2, Belgium: 2, Japan: 1 | 0 (0.0) | 28 (100.0) |
| Wilson (2011) | 1993–2010 | Paediatric wards | 8 | 5 | USA: 2, France: 1, Canada: 1, UK: 1 | 0 (0.0) | 5 (100.0) |
| Engineer (2016) | 2000–2012 | Acute care hospitals | 16 | 2 | USA: 2 | 0 (0.0) | 2 (100.0) |
| Stalpers (2015) | 2004–2012 | Acute care hospitals | 29 | 16 | USA†: 12, Belgium†: 1, | 0 (0.0) | 17 (100.0) |
| Mitchell (2018) | 2000–2015 | Hospital wards | 54 | 19 | USA: 13, Thailand: 1, | 1 (4.3) | 18 (95.7) |
| Hill (2017) | 1994–2017 | Acute care hospitals | 5 | 5 | USA: 3, UK: 2 | 0 (0.0) | 5 (100.0) |
*These are the number of studies that met the original review criteria, that is, conducted in a regular ward setting on the role of nurse staffing and patient care outcomes.
†One study conducted across both countries.
‡Restricted search criteria to high-income countries.
ICU, intensive care unit; UR, unreported.
Figure 2Risk of bias assessment using the AMSTAR-2 checklist (key: red–no, green–yes, lighter green–partially yes, yellow–not applicable).
Figure 3Stacked bar chart showing the range of patient care outcomes reported across reviews and the number of reviews which report this in an LMIC study (blue: number of reviews reporting the outcome from an LMIC study; orange: number of reviews reporting the outcome from only non-LMIC studies). *Hospital-acquired infections include pneumonia, UTI, central line-associated blood stream infections, nosocomial infections, wound infections. #Respiratory complications include pulmonary compromise/respiratory failure/pulmonary embolism. The least reported patient care outcomes were missed nursing care, patient adverse events, abandonment of treatment, CNS complications, adverse drug events, restraint use, fluid overload and the number of IV cannulations which were all reported by one systematic review each. CNS, central nervous system; GI, gastrointestinal; IV, intravenous; LMIC, low/middle-income country; UTI, urinary tract infection.
Figure 4Bar chart showing the patient-to-nurse ratio per shift range described in individual studies that reported this metric and described a range (countries of origin and first author of the individual studies are presented, and the y-axis represents the number of patients per nurse). The best staffing ratio in the study context is presented in blue while the worst is presented in orange, these best and worst ratios were used in study-specific exploratory of the association between staffing and nursing quality.
Figure 5Horizontal bar charts showing the mean total nursing hour per patient day (top) and the mean patient-to-nurse ratios (bottom) across primary studies reporting these metrics (first author and countries in which individual studies were conducted are depicted on the y-axis). *Median value.