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Nurse Coordination App for Critical Care

by Colleen Fleiss on January 28, 2024 at 12:04 AM
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The newly developed NCCCS electronic app aims to enhance the care coordination skills of nurses responsible for managing critically ill patients on life support. ()


The NCCCS app utilizes the scoring system referred to as the Nurses' Care Coordinate Competency Scale (NCCCS), developed by Dr. Takiguchi et al. in 2017, and it is currently being translated into Chinese, Italian, Polish, and Persian.

‘The NCCCS app provides prompt feedback to nurses overseeing critically ill patients on life support, evaluating their care coordination behaviors through self-assessment of frequency. #nurses #criticallyill #patientcare #mobileapp’

The NCCCS app was tested in the study and found to be highly effective in training when used by individuals who had certain years of critical care management experience but had low care coordination competencies.

Addressing Gaps in Nurse Education for Critical Care Coordination

While the significance of care coordination for appropriate critical care is recognized, there is a lack of established educational methods for nurses engaged in care coordination. The quality of care, especially concerning the success or failure of multidisciplinary care for critically ill patients on life support, has been demonstrated to be linked not only to survival rates but also to the development of physical, mental, and cognitive dysfunction in post-intensive care patients.

Dr. Takiguchi said, "Our NCCCS app will help nurses enhance their care coordination competencies in the management of critically ill patients. It offers a new strategy to improve the physical, mental, and cognitive outcomes of critically ill patients."

Key Highlights

The findings of this study may provide a new strategy for improving outcomes in critically ill patients on life support.

Reference:

  1. Effectiveness of a self-assessment application in evaluating the care coordination competency of intensive care unit nurses in managing patients on life support: - (https:onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jjns.12584)
Source: Newswise

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