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Journal Article

Citation

Bulson J. J. Emerg. Manag. 2020; 18(3): 213-220.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Weston Medical Publishing)

DOI

10.5055/jem.2020.0467

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to provide foundational data supporting the need for nursing education focused on emergency preparedness and response for nursing staff.
DESIGN: This study is a cross-sectional, quantitative, descriptive, correlational quality improvement study.
SETTING: The study location is a Midwest healthcare system comprised of 14 acute care facilities including pediat-ric and adult level I trauma centers, a burn center, and a fully dedicated pediatric hospital; five long-term care facili-ties; 230 ambulatory sites; 4,200 employed providers; and a health plan.
PARTICIPANTS: A convenience sample of 5,172 currently employed nurses.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The main outcome of this study is the documentation of overall familiarity with emer-gency preparedness and response knowledge among nursing staff. Logistic ordinal regression statistical analysis was completed to determine the significance of individual domains impacting the overall familiarity score.
RESULTS: Findings based on the results of the "overall familiarity with response activities related to a large-scale emergency incident" question documented most staff (78.45 percent) have little or no familiarity with their role in dis-aster response. Six domains or focused education areas were identified as having a statistically significant impact (p < 0.0001 - p = 0.0195) on the results of the overall familiarity question.
CONCLUSIONS: These study results support the need for more education (academic and/or institutional) related to nursing emergency preparedness and response.


Language: en

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