Inpatient Safety IIHow can clinicians measure safety and quality in acute care?
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Perceptions of care in patients from culturally and linguistically diverse background during acute and critical illness: A integrative literature review
2021, Australian Critical CareCitation Excerpt :The reduction of adverse events has been the main focus of national and international initiatives to improve safety and quality in acute care settings.3 However, in acute care services and intensive care units (ICUs), information about patients' culture, ethnicity, and religion has been omitted from routine data collection, leading to disparities in safety and quality of health care between CALD and mainstream cultural groups.16–19 Despite widely recognised safety and quality risks, there is a paucity of research studies on the perceptions of patients from CALD groups and their healthcare providers with regard to the safety and quality of hospital care during acute and critical illness.
Qualitative or quantitative? Developing and evaluating complex interventions: Time to end the paradigm war
2013, International Journal of Nursing StudiesEssentials for Quality and Safety Improvement in Health Care: A Resource for Developing Countries
2022, Essentials for Quality and Safety Improvement in Health Care: A Resource for Developing CountriesQuality nursing care in Australian paediatric hospitals: A Delphi approach to identifying indicators
2012, Journal of Clinical Nursing
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