The data used for measuring and safety purposes actually comes directly from the information on patient care that is documented daily? Data Makes the Difference helps RNs understand how to use accurate and meaningful quality and safety data in their practice. It demystifies data and counters the negative, incorrect perception that nurses can’t use data to drive patient care. It also empowers nurses to become confident and comfortable in using quality and safety data to demonstrate the contributions of nurses to patient-centred outcomes. After reading Data Makes the Difference , nurses you will be able to:: Comprehend quality data and quality measurements. Utilize data to inform patient care and track outcomes. Understand the future directions in the use of quality data:: EHRs, telehealth and eMeasures. Know how nurses lead through data use and interpretation.
Chapter 1. History, Background, and Introduction The Institute of Medicine Reports:: Pioneering Work on Quality and Safety in Health Care Other Seminal Reports:: Carnegie Study on Nursing Education Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) Nurses are Key to Quality Chapter 2. Quality Data:: Definitions, Measures, and Metrics What is Quality Data and Quality Measurement? Donabedian:: A Useful Model for Thinking About Types of Data and the People Who Use Data for Nursing Practice Comparing Apples to Apples:: Standardized Definitions and Shared Metrics Related to Quality Types of Data and Measures of Nursing Quality New Clinical Measures in 2014 Chapter 3. Utilizing Data to Inform Patient Care and Track Outcomes:: Answering the Question, How Are We Doing? Learning from Other Industries Dashboards, Scorecards, Targets, and Benchmarks Clinical Decision Support Systems Relevance for Clinical Nurses and Leaders Chapter 4. Future Directions in the Use of Quality Data:: Electronic Health Records, Telehealth and eMeasures Electronic Health Records and Meaningful Use Beyond EHR:: Computerized Provider Order Entry, Barcodes, and Decision Support Systems Technological Innovations and Measuring Nursing Quality Processes and Outcomes eMeasurement and Nurse-sensitive Indicators Big Data States Invest in Health Information:: The Case of New York State’s HEALNY programs Future Directions:: Telehealth and Personal Digital Assistants Chapter 5. How Nurses Lead through Data Use and Interpretation:: Insights from the Chief Nurse Nursing’s Role in Preventing Hospital-Acquired Conditions Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI) Falls Prevention Maternity Measures Care Coordination Magnet Exemplars Insights from the CNO:: Summary of Key Points Final Thoughts Appendix A. Unit Report Cards for Clinical Nurses to Improve Practice References Index
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