Project Details
Description
Ph.d. projekt
Background: The relationship between patient safety and the work environment of nurses is hypothesized to have significant implications for both the attrition of nurses from the profession and patient safety. Older patients with multimorbidity are particularly vulnerable in the context of nursing shortages; they often interact with multiple specialties and are at increased risk for adverse events such as restraint use, falls, and medication errors. Nursing-sensitive indicators can potentially predict breaches in patient safety by highlighting changes in patient health status influenced by nursing care. However, the precise nature of this relationship remains unclear.
Objective: To enhance patient safety and the work environment of nurses by developing an intervention that prioritizes nursing interventions in the care of older patients over 65 with multimorbidity. The study aims to determine whether nursing-sensitive indicators related to the work environment can predict patient safety risks.
Methodology: The study is conducted with stakeholders, drawing on principles of action research, and divided into two phases: Phase one involves mapping knowledge, definitions, and concepts through a scoping review with stakeholders to explore the relationship between the work environment of nurses and patient safety for older adults with multimorbidity. Phase two is a case study where an intervention is co-created with nurses in a hospital ward and researchers to improve the work environment and patient safety. The intervention will be tested and evaluated for quality.
Conclusion and perspective: The intervention can potentially retain the nursing workforce, alter workflows, educate staff, optimize resource allocation, enhance care efficiency, and prioritize nursing interventions.
Background: The relationship between patient safety and the work environment of nurses is hypothesized to have significant implications for both the attrition of nurses from the profession and patient safety. Older patients with multimorbidity are particularly vulnerable in the context of nursing shortages; they often interact with multiple specialties and are at increased risk for adverse events such as restraint use, falls, and medication errors. Nursing-sensitive indicators can potentially predict breaches in patient safety by highlighting changes in patient health status influenced by nursing care. However, the precise nature of this relationship remains unclear.
Objective: To enhance patient safety and the work environment of nurses by developing an intervention that prioritizes nursing interventions in the care of older patients over 65 with multimorbidity. The study aims to determine whether nursing-sensitive indicators related to the work environment can predict patient safety risks.
Methodology: The study is conducted with stakeholders, drawing on principles of action research, and divided into two phases: Phase one involves mapping knowledge, definitions, and concepts through a scoping review with stakeholders to explore the relationship between the work environment of nurses and patient safety for older adults with multimorbidity. Phase two is a case study where an intervention is co-created with nurses in a hospital ward and researchers to improve the work environment and patient safety. The intervention will be tested and evaluated for quality.
Conclusion and perspective: The intervention can potentially retain the nursing workforce, alter workflows, educate staff, optimize resource allocation, enhance care efficiency, and prioritize nursing interventions.
| Status | Active |
|---|---|
| Effective start/end date | 21/10/24 → 21/10/27 |
Collaborative partners
- Psykiatrien Region Sjælland, Slagelse (Project partner) (lead)
- Department of Regional Health Research (Project partner)
Fingerprint
Explore the research topics touched on by this project. These labels are generated based on the underlying awards/grants. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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If a bed is just a bed, what does that make the nurse? Nurses' negotiation of identity in a contested discursive terrain - an institutional ethnography.
Andersen, L. L., Lauge Berring, L., Hølge-Hazelton, B. & Phillips, L., 29 Oct 2025, In: Nursing Inquiry. 33, 1, p. e70067 e70067.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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Co-created interventions and improvements of work environment of nurses to enhance patient safety
Vintersborg, T., Berring, L. L., Hølge-Hazelton, B. & Sørensen, P. K., 2024, p. 1-14.Research output: Contribution to conference without a publisher/journal › Abstract › Research › peer-review
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Relationship between Nurses’ Work Environment and Patient Safety in Regional Health Service: A Scoping Review Protocol
Thorsboe, L. M., Hølge-Hazelton, B., Vintersborg, T. & Berring, L. L., 9 Nov 2023, In: Nordisk Sygeplejeforskning. 13, 4, 11 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Projects
- 1 Finished
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REFAS: Et forskningsprogram om REkruttering og FAstholdelse af Sygeplejersker i somatikken og psykiatrien i Region Sjælland
Hølge-Hazelton, B. (Principle researcher), Berring, L. L. (Principle researcher) & Frederiksen, J. (Co-researcher)
01/01/19 → 31/12/25
Project: Research