Abbonarsi

Effect of Virtual Nursing Implementation on Emergency Department Efficiency and Quality of Care - 03/04/25

Doi : 10.1016/j.ajem.2025.02.024 
Saif Khairat a, d, e, , Jennifer Morelli a, Qiyao Qin b, Xiaoyu Wu b, Randy Fakhreddin b, Barbara S. Edson c, Mauri Williams c
a School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC, USA 
b Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC, USA 
c UNC Health, Morrisville, NC, USA 
d Carolina Health Informatics Program, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA 
e Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA 

Corresponding author at: Carolina Health Informatics Program (CHIP), Sheps Center for Health Services and Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 428 Carrington Hall, NC 27514, USA.Carolina Health Informatics Program (CHIP), Sheps Center for Health Services and ResearchUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill428 Carrington HallNC27514USA

Abstract

Importance

Nursing shortages lead to longer emergency department (ED) wait times and incomplete documentation. US health systems are rapidly implementing virtual nursing, a new care delivery model, to improve care and alleviate nursing burden by providing nursing care and expertise via telehealth.

Objective

To evaluate the association of using virtual nursing for patients admitted via the ED with quality outcomes, namely, wait time, admission assessment duration, documentation completeness, and number of interruptions.

Materials and methods

Non-randomized retrospective cohort study of adult patients over the age of 18 seen in the ED and subsequently admitted to one of six hospitals.

Results

Patients who had in-person admission assessments median wait time was 525.5 min (IQR: 332.9–969.8), while the median wait time for patients using virtual nursing for admission assessments was 429.5 min (IQR: 292.6–954.5). In-person admissions had a median duration of 24.0 min (IQR: 15.0–36.0), while virtual nursing admissions median duration was 29.0 min (IQR: 18.0–42.0). The average number of uncompleted documentation fields for in-person admissions was 0.4 ± 1.5, while the average for virtual nursing admissions was 0.2 ± 0.5. Finally, the average number of interruptions during admission for in-person was 1.8 ± 1.5 interruptions, while virtual nursing admissions averaged 1.4 ± 1.3 interruptions.

Discussion

Virtual nursing was associated with shorter wait times, more complete nursing documentation, and fewer interruptions during admission assessments for patients admitted via the ED.

Conclusion

Virtual nursing is a promising care delivery model that may lead to reduced nursing burnout and enhanced patient care coordination.

Il testo completo di questo articolo è disponibile in PDF.

Highlights

Virtual nursing admission assessments were correlated with a reduced ED wait time.
Virtual nursing admissions had fewer uncompleted admission documentation tasks.
Virtual nursing admissions had fewer interruptions than in-person admissions.

Il testo completo di questo articolo è disponibile in PDF.

Keywords : Telehealth, Virtual nursing, Time-to-treatment, Patient admission


Mappa


© 2025  Elsevier Inc. Tutti i diritti riservati.
Aggiungere alla mia biblioteca Togliere dalla mia biblioteca Stampare
Esportazione

    Citazioni Export

  • File

  • Contenuto

Vol 91

P. 59-66 - maggio 2025 Ritorno al numero
Articolo precedente Articolo precedente
  • Treatment of headache reduces blood pressure among most patients with migraine and elevated blood pressure
  • Hannah Kareff, Shellyann Sharpe, Chiraag Gupta, Benjamin W. Friedman
| Articolo seguente Articolo seguente
  • The effect of different retraining intervals for immediate life support training: A randomized controlled trial
  • Ming-Ju Hsieh, Chih-Wei Yang, Hao-Yang Lin, Ying-Chih Ko, Wen-Chu Chiang, Wei-Tien Chang, Matthew Huei-Ming Ma

Benvenuto su EM|consulte, il riferimento dei professionisti della salute.
L'accesso al testo integrale di questo articolo richiede un abbonamento.

Già abbonato a @@106933@@ rivista ?

@@150455@@ Voir plus

Il mio account


Dichiarazione CNIL

EM-CONSULTE.COM è registrato presso la CNIL, dichiarazione n. 1286925.

Ai sensi della legge n. 78-17 del 6 gennaio 1978 sull'informatica, sui file e sulle libertà, Lei puo' esercitare i diritti di opposizione (art.26 della legge), di accesso (art.34 a 38 Legge), e di rettifica (art.36 della legge) per i dati che La riguardano. Lei puo' cosi chiedere che siano rettificati, compeltati, chiariti, aggiornati o cancellati i suoi dati personali inesati, incompleti, equivoci, obsoleti o la cui raccolta o di uso o di conservazione sono vietati.
Le informazioni relative ai visitatori del nostro sito, compresa la loro identità, sono confidenziali.
Il responsabile del sito si impegna sull'onore a rispettare le condizioni legali di confidenzialità applicabili in Francia e a non divulgare tali informazioni a terzi.


Tutto il contenuto di questo sito: Copyright © 2026 Elsevier, i suoi licenziatari e contributori. Tutti i diritti sono riservati. Inclusi diritti per estrazione di testo e di dati, addestramento dell’intelligenza artificiale, e tecnologie simili. Per tutto il contenuto ‘open access’ sono applicati i termini della licenza Creative Commons.