(From left) Doctoral student Hannah Yamagata, research assistant professor Kushol Gupta, and postdoctoral fellow Marshall Padilla holding 3D-printed models of nanoparticles.
(Image: Bella Ciervo)
1 min. read
A new Penn Nursing Center for Health Outcomes & Policy Research (CHOPR) study sheds light on the critical factors that help or hinder hospital nurses in providing quality care to socially disadvantaged populations. The findings, published in JAMA Network Open, offer vital insights to inform hospital strategies for advancing high-quality, equitable care.
The study, which analyzed open-text responses from 1,084 direct care hospital nurses across 58 New York and Illinois hospitals, identified six key themes impacting care delivery:
“Our research highlights that nurses, as frontline care providers, possess invaluable perspectives on the systemic, institutional, community, and individual factors that shape high quality care,” says lead author J. Margo Brooks Carthon, the Tyson Family Endowed Term Chair for Gerontological Research; professor of nursing in the Department of Family and Community Health; director of the Bates Center for the Study of the History of Nursing; and associate director of CHOPR. “Their experiences underscore the urgent need for hospitals to prioritize patient-centered approaches, invest in adequate staffing, strengthen community partnerships, and foster a diverse and culturally competent nursing workforce. By listening to and acting on these insights, we can significantly improve health outcomes for all patients, including those from socially and economically disadvantaged backgrounds.”
Read more at Penn Nursing News.
From Penn Nursing News
(From left) Doctoral student Hannah Yamagata, research assistant professor Kushol Gupta, and postdoctoral fellow Marshall Padilla holding 3D-printed models of nanoparticles.
(Image: Bella Ciervo)
Jin Liu, Penn’s newest economics faculty member, specializes in international trade.
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