2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2016.08.001
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‘Failure to Maintain’: A theoretical proposition for a new quality indicator of nurse care rationing for complex older people in hospital

Abstract: Complex older patients represent about half of all acute public hospital admissions in Australia. People with dementia are a classic example of complex older patients, and have been identified to have higher rates of hospital-acquired complications. Complications contribute to poorer patient outcomes, and increase length of stay and cost to hospitals. The care for older people with dementia is complex, and this has been attributed to: their cognitive response to being hospitalised; their limited ability to sel… Show more

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Cited by 112 publications
(139 citation statements)
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References 119 publications
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“…The finding that personal accountability is negatively linked to missed nursing care, above and beyond scarce resources, supports previous findings (Srulovici & Drach‐Zahavy, ) and suggests that missed nursing care reflects not only a clinical but also an ethical decision‐making process (Bail & Grealish, ). Personal accountability is linked to personal and professional identity and rooted in upbringing, socioeconomic status and culture and in the practices of socialization into the profession and professional experience (Day, ; Krautscheid, ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…The finding that personal accountability is negatively linked to missed nursing care, above and beyond scarce resources, supports previous findings (Srulovici & Drach‐Zahavy, ) and suggests that missed nursing care reflects not only a clinical but also an ethical decision‐making process (Bail & Grealish, ). Personal accountability is linked to personal and professional identity and rooted in upbringing, socioeconomic status and culture and in the practices of socialization into the profession and professional experience (Day, ; Krautscheid, ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Unfortunately, the under‐recognition of functional changes as potential signals of acute conditions and general devaluing of older peoples' functional abilities fit with other researchers' findings about care of older people not being viewed as complex (Dahlke & Phinney, ; Baumbusch, Dahlke & Phinney, ; Higgins et al., ; Kjorven et al., ; Parke & Hunter, ). Nurses' constructions of definitions of risks and their lower priority on older people's function so that they could manage risks fit with the theoretical framework—failure to maintain; that framework was developed after reviewing international literature to explain how care rationing for older people ultimately leads to failure to maintain physical and cognitive functioning (Bail & Grealish, ). Similar detrimental outcomes to patients when nurses do not have close surveillance of patients have been identified as failure to rescue (Aiken et al., , ; Clarke & Aiken, ; Schmid, Hoffman, Happ, Wolf, & DeVita, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Because this secondary analysis did not set out to examine nurses' constructions of their definitions of safety risks, a primary study that had such a focus could have provided a more nuanced perspective. Although the data from this study were collected 5 years ago and in a Canadian context, more current international literature and clinical observation suggest that these findings remain relevant in explaining how nurses are negotiating the challenges with caring for older people in other contexts (Bail & Grealish, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These may be considered “intermediate” outcomes, precipitating patient deterioration, for example, CI was associated with mortality only in patients who had at least 1 adverse event in hospital, and dementia associated with mortality only if delirium had occurred . Such adverse clinical events could indicate a “failure to maintain” patients' basic health needs, leading to further deterioration . A better understanding of how CI precipitates these events, and what can be done to prevent, detect, and reduce their risk, would enable development of better care models and improved patient outcomes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%