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The effects of a one-to-one nurse-to-patient ratio on the mortality rate in neonatal intensive care: a retrospective, longitudinal, population-based study.

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posted on 2016-06-08, 10:54 authored by S. I. Watson, W. Arulampalam, S. Petrou, N. Marlow, A. S. Morgan, Elizabeth S. Draper, N. Modi, Staffing Neonatal Data Analysis Unit (NDAU) and the Neonatal Economic
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the effect of the provision of a one-to-one nurse-to-patient ratio on mortality rates in neonatal intensive care units. DESIGN: A population-based analysis of operational clinical data using an instrumental variable method. SETTING: National Health Service neonatal units in England contributing data to the National Neonatal Research Database at the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit and participating in the Neonatal Economic, Staffing, and Clinical Outcomes Project. PARTICIPANTS: 43 tertiary-level neonatal units observed monthly over the period January 2008 to December 2012. INTERVENTION: Proportion of neonatal intensive care days or proportion of intensive care admissions for which one-to-one nursing was provided. OUTCOMES: Monthly in-hospital intensive care mortality rate. RESULTS: Over the study period, the provision of one-to-one nursing in tertiary neonatal units declined from a median of 9.1% of intensive care days in 2008 to 5.9% in 2012. A 10 percentage point decrease in the proportion of intensive care days on which one-to-one nursing was provided was associated with an increase in the in-hospital mortality rate of 0.6 (95% CI 1.2 to 0.0) deaths per 100 infants receiving neonatal intensive care per month compared with a median monthly mortality rate of 4.5 deaths per 100 infants per month. The results remained robust to sensitivity analyses that varied the estimation sample of units, the choice of instrumental variables, unit classification and the selection of control variables. CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests that decreases in the provision of one-to-one nursing in tertiary-level neonatal intensive care units increase the in-hospital mortality rate.

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Citation

Archives of disease in childhood. Fetal and neonatal edition, 2016, 101 (3):F195-F200

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Archives of disease in childhood. Fetal and neonatal edition

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group for 1. Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health 2. European Academy of Paediatrics

eissn

1468-2052

Acceptance date

2015-11-12

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2016-06-08

Publisher version

http://fn.bmj.com/content/101/3/F195

Language

en

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