All Stories

  1. Care My Way: Co‐Designing a Patient‐Held Resource to Improve Information Sharing Between Primary and Specialist Care for People With Cancer
  2. Challenges and possibilities of enabling person-centred engagement in medication safety with older people living at home
  3. A scoping review of quality prescribing indicators, rules, and criteria for primary care
  4. Developing best practice principles for enhancing engagement with consumers from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds in cancer services
  5. Mind the Gap: A Comparative Cross-Sectional Online Survey of Older Adults, Caregivers, and Developers on Aged-Care Digital Health Solutions (Preprint)
  6. Predictive values of trigger tools for identifying adverse events in hospitalised patients using a medical record review: A systematic review
  7. Perspectives of Healthcare Professionals, Patients and Family Members on Managing Regular Medications Across the Perioperative Pathway: An Exploratory Qualitative Study
  8. Nurse and Other Healthcare Managers' Experiences and Recommendations for Patient Incident Reporting Processes and Real‐Time Software Development: A Qualitative Study
  9. Engagement with patients and families about managing medications in critical care units: A mixed methods systematic review
  10. Co‐Producing Patient‐Reported Experience Measures With People With Intellectual Disability to Improve Healthcare Quality and Outcomes: The ‘Listen to Me’ Project Protocol
  11. Identifying Care and Support Needs Profiles for Home-Based Aged Care: A Latent Class Analysis Using Routinely Collected Aged Care Assessment Information
  12. Engagement in Medication Communication During Transitions of Care for Rural Aged Care Residents and Family Caregivers: A Qualitative Study
  13. Fertility Concerns and Information Needs and Preferences of Australian Women With Chronic Kidney Disease: An Exploratory Qualitative Study
  14. Culturally appropriate and respectful end-of-life care for patients and their families in the intensive care unit: A mixed-method study
  15. Opioid administration and weaning practices in mechanically ventilated adult intensive care unit patients: A retrospective analysis
  16. Nurses’ and midwives’ knowledge and safe-handling practices related to hazardous drugs: A cross-sectional study
  17. Early‐Career Registered Nurses' Experiences of Implementing Non–Pharmacological Interventions for Delirium Management: A Qualitative Descriptive Study
  18. Communication Processes Related to Decision‐Making in Medication Management Between Healthcare Providers, Older People and Their Carers: A Systematic Review
  19. Comprehensive day-to-day care and support needs of older Australians requiring government-funded home-based aged care: a scoping review
  20. Medication Management of Patients With Cancer Undergoing Surgery From Preadmission to Discharge: A Mixed‐Methods Systematic Review
  21. Characteristics, care and support needs of older Victorians requiring a government‐funded Home Care Package: An observational study
  22. Addressing respect for diversity in reporting race and ethnicity of participants in research studies
  23. Knowledge and safe handling practices affecting the occupational exposure of nurses and midwives to hazardous drugs: A mixed methods systematic review
  24. The handling of hazardous medications by nurses and midwives: A retrospective cohort study
  25. Experiences and Perceptions of Medication Management Communication During Transitions of Care for Residents in Aged Care Homes and Their Caregivers: A Qualitative Meta‐Synthesis
  26. Enhancing patient participation in discharge medication communication: a feasibility pilot trial
  27. Patient safety incident reporting software: A cross‐sectional survey of nurses and other users' perspectives
  28. Assessment of inter-rater reliability of screening tools to identify patients at risk of medication-related problems across the emergency department continuum of care
  29. A retrospective descriptive study of medical record documentation of how treatment limitations are communicated with family members of patients from culturally diverse backgrounds
  30. Decision-making about changing medications across transitions of care: Opportunities for enhanced patient and family engagement
  31. Health professionals’ perceptions of the development needs of incident reporting software: A qualitative systematic review
  32. Nurses engaging with referral letters and discharge summaries: A qualitative study
  33. Creating safer cancer care with ethnic minority patients: A qualitative analysis of the experiences of cancer service staff
  34. Co-design of an intervention to improve patient participation in discharge medication communication
  35. Nurse management of noradrenaline infusions in intensive care units: An observational study
  36. Improving Medication Safety in Cancer Services for Ethnic Minority Consumers: Protocol for a Pilot Feasibility and Acceptability Study of a Co-Designed Consumer Engagement Intervention
  37. The management of pain during pediatric hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: A qualitative study of contextual factors that influenced pain management practices
  38. Associations between potentially inappropriate prescribing and increased number of medications with postdischarge health outcomes among geriatric rehabilitation inpatients: RESORT study
  39. Associations of postoperative delirium with activities of daily living in older people after major surgery: A prospective cohort study
  40. Improving Medication Safety in Cancer Services for Ethnic Minority Consumers: Protocol for a Pilot Feasibility and Acceptability Study of a Co-Designed Consumer Engagement Intervention (Preprint)
  41. Family experiences and perceptions of intensive care unit care and communication during the COVID-19 pandemic
  42. Impacts of technology implementation on nurses' work motivation, engagement, satisfaction and well‐being: A realist review
  43. Older patient participation in discharge medication communication: an observational study
  44. Use of General Practitioner Telehealth Services During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Regional Victoria, Australia: Retrospective Analysis
  45. Patient-Centered Care Experiences of First-Generation, South Asian Migrants with Chronic Diseases Living in High-Income, Western Countries: Systematic Review
  46. Staff experiences, perceptions of care, and communication in the intensive care unit during the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia
  47. Validation of Two Screening Tools for Detecting Delirium in Older Patients in the Post-Anaesthetic Care Unit: A Diagnostic Test Accuracy Study
  48. The influence of intensive care unit culture and environment on nurse decision‐making when managing vasoactive medications: A qualitative exploratory study
  49. Workforce development for better management of physical comorbidities among people with serious mental illness
  50. More than a fleeting conversation: managing medication communication across transitions of care
  51. Nurses’ Experiences After Implementation of an Organization-Wide Electronic Medical Record: Qualitative Descriptive Study
  52. Factors associated with readmission in chronic kidney disease: Systematic review and meta‐analysis
  53. Utilisation of general practitioner telehealth services during the COVID-19 pandemic in regional Victoria, Australia (Preprint)
  54. How safe is virtual healthcare?
  55. Associations between hyper-polypharmacy and potentially inappropriate prescribing with clinical and functional outcomes in older adults
  56. Development of a Complex Intervention for Effective Management of Type 2 Diabetes in a Developing Country
  57. Delirium screening tools in the post-anaesthetic care unit: a systematic review and meta-analysis
  58. Towards patient‐centred communication in the management of older patients' medications across transitions of care: A focused ethnographic study
  59. Communication related to medication incidents—A concept analysis and literature review
  60. How does implementation of an electronic medical record system impact nurses’ work motivation, engagement, satisfaction and well-being? A realist review protocol
  61. Associations of person-related, environment-related and communication-related factors on medication errors in public and private hospitals: a retrospective clinical audit
  62. Associations between inappropriate medication use and (instrumental) activities of daily living in geriatric rehabilitation inpatients: RESORT study
  63. What influences rural women's choices in maternity care: A qualitative exploratory study
  64. Codesigning consumer engagement strategies with ethnic minority consumers in Australian cancer services: the CanEngage Project protocol
  65. Factors associated with the decision to prescribe and administer antipsychotics for older people with delirium: a qualitative descriptive study
  66. Older patients’ engagement in hospital medication safety behaviours
  67. Nurse role and contribution to antimicrobial stewardship: An integrative review
  68. Patient perspectives and experiences of sexual health conversations and cardiovascular disease: A qualitative study
  69. Interprofessional and Intraprofessional Communication about Older People’s Medications across Transitions of Care
  70. Nurse Motivation, Engagement and Well-Being before an Electronic Medical Record System Implementation: A Mixed Methods Study
  71. Inappropriate medications and physical function: a systematic review
  72. Enabling sustained communication with patients for safe and effective management of oral chemotherapy: A longitudinal ethnography
  73. Medication-based Refill Adherence Among Pregnant Women Living With HIV in Nigeria
  74. ‘I will go to my grave fighting for grammar’: Exploring the ability of language-trained raters to implement a professionally-relevant rating scale for writing
  75. Incidence and risk factors for acute delirium in older patients with a hip fracture: A retrospective cohort study
  76. Medicines Use Evaluation guideline
  77. Interventions to reduce medication errors in adult medical and surgical settings: a systematic review
  78. Nurse management of vasoactive medications in intensive care: A systematic review
  79. Use of Technology-Based Tools to Support Adolescents and Young Adults With Chronic Disease: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
  80. Patient engagement in admission and discharge medication communication: A systematic mixed studies review
  81. Overseas qualified nurses’ communication with other nurses and health professionals: An observational study
  82. Culturally sensitive communication in healthcare: A concept analysis
  83. Family involvement in managing medications of older patients across transitions of care: a systematic review
  84. A cluster randomised controlled feasibility study of nurse-initiated behavioural strategies to manage interruptions during medication administration
  85. A patient-centred care and engagement program in intensive care reduces adverse events and improves patient and care partner satisfaction
  86. Inappropriate medication use in hospitalised oldest old patients across transitions of care
  87. Culturally sensitive communication at the end-of-life in the intensive care unit: A systematic review
  88. Medication error trends and effects of person-related, environment-related and communication-related factors on medication errors in a paediatric hospital
  89. Use of Technology-Based Tools to Support Adolescents and Young Adults With Chronic Disease: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (Preprint)
  90. Quantifying the medication burden of kidney transplant recipients in the first year post-transplantation
  91. Interdisciplinary medication decision making by pharmacists in pediatric hospital settings: An ethnographic study
  92. Patient-, medication- and environment-related factors affecting medication discrepancies in older patients
  93. Healthcare professionals can assist patients with managing post-kidney transplant expectations
  94. Communication and Decision-Making About End-of-Life Care in the Intensive Care Unit
  95. Medication Use and Fall-Related Hospital Admissions from Long-Term Care Facilities: A Hospital-Based Case–Control Study
  96. The impact of interruptions on medication errors in hospitals: an observational study of nurses
  97. Barriers, enablers and challenges to initiating end-of-life care in an Australian intensive care unit context
  98. Patients' reports of adverse events: a data linkage study of Australian adults aged 45 years and over
  99. Stressors and coping resources of Australian kidney transplant recipients related to medication taking: a qualitative study
  100. Medication communication between nurses and doctors for paediatric acute care: An ethnographic study
  101. Effectiveness of Primary Health Care Services in Addressing Mental Health Needs of Minority Refugee Population in New Zealand
  102. Patient and family engagement with hospital electronic systems: Juggling for co-existence
  103. Incidence of complications in men undergoing transurethral resection of the prostate
  104. Patients’ experiences in Australian hospitals: a systematic review of evidence
  105. Pain assessment and management in paediatric oncology: a cross-sectional audit
  106. Inter-hospital ‘patient expect’ calls of clinical handovers for expected patients transferred from rural to metropolitan hospitals: A retrospective clinical audit
  107. The functions and roles of questioning during nursing handovers in specialty settings: an ethnographic study
  108. Trajectory of sedation assessment and sedative use in intubated and ventilated patients in intensive care: A clinical audit
  109. Trials and tribulations with electronic medication adherence monitoring in kidney transplantation
  110. Creating opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration and patient-centred care: how nurses, doctors, pharmacists and patients use communication strategies when managing medications in an acute hospital setting
  111. The transplant team's support of kidney transplant recipients to take their prescribed medications: a collective responsibility
  112. Corticosteroid-induced psychiatric disturbances: It is time for pharmacists to take notice
  113. Communicating about the management of medications as patients move across transition points of care: an observation and interview study
  114. Difficulties with assessment and management of an infant’s distress in the postoperative period: Optimising opportunities for interdisciplinary information-sharing
  115. Comparison of medication policies to guide nursing practice across seven Victorian health services
  116. A compilation of consumers’ stories: the development of a video to enhance medication adherence in newly transplanted kidney recipients
  117. Prescribed Doses of Opioids in Long-Term Care Facilities
  118. The concept of teamwork does not fully explain how interprofessional work occurs in intensive care
  119. Standard setting in specific-purpose language testing: What can a qualitative study add?
  120. The missing evidence: a systematic review of patients' experiences of adverse events in health care
  121. Perspectives of clinical handover processes: a multi-site survey across different health professionals
  122. Impact of automated dispensing cabinets on medication selection and preparation error rates in an emergency department: a prospective and direct observational before-and-after study
  123. Challenges and opportunities of undertaking a video ethnographic study to understand medication communication
  124. Medication communication during handover interactions in specialty practice settings
  125. Initial Medication Adherence—Review and Recommendations for Good Practices in Outcomes Research: An ISPOR Medication Adherence and Persistence Special Interest Group Report
  126. Nephrologists' management of patient medications in kidney transplantation: results of an online survey
  127. Challenges to consumers travelling with multiple medicines
  128. Nursing educators' views of overseas qualified nurses' communication abilities
  129. An Analysis of Clinical Handover Miscommunication Using a Language and Social Psychology Approach
  130. Failures in communication through documents and documentation across the perioperative pathway
  131. Challenges of managing medications for older people at transition points of care
  132. Clinically significant pain is experienced by just over a third of all hospitalised patients, affecting around a half of surgical and a quarter of medical admissions
  133. Working with people who have killed: The experience and attitudes of forensic mental health clinicians working with forensic patients
  134. Use of the Screening Tool of Older Persons' Prescriptions (STOPP) and the Screening Tool to Alert doctors to the Right Treatment (START) in hospitalised older people
  135. Nurses' Knowledge and Attitudes Regarding Pain in Saudi Arabia
  136. Moving from rhetoric to reality: Patient and family involvement in bedside handover
  137. A critical ethnography of communication processes involving the management of oral chemotherapeutic agents by patients with a primary diagnosis of colorectal cancer: study protocol
  138. Examining the preparation and ongoing support of adults to take their medications as prescribed in kidney transplantation
  139. Pharmacists’ Interprofessional Communication About Medications in Specialty Hospital Settings
  140. Engaging children in managing their medications in hospital: Does it really matter and is it a possibility?
  141. Using patients’ experiences of adverse events to improve health service delivery and practice: protocol of a data linkage study of Australian adults age 45 and above
  142. Motivational interviewing to explore culturally and linguistically diverse people's comorbidity medication self-efficacy
  143. Complexities of medicines safety: communicating about managing medicines at transition points of care across emergency departments and medical wards
  144. Creating spaces in intensive care for safe communication: a video-reflexive ethnographic study: Table 1
  145. Barriers and enablers affecting patient engagement in managing medications within specialty hospital settings
  146. Interventions to Reduce Medication Errors in Pediatric Intensive Care
  147. Impact of Medication Reconciliation and Review on Clinical Outcomes
  148. Interventions to improve medication adherence in adult kidney transplant recipients: a systematic review
  149. Effects of patient-, environment- and medication-related factors on high-alert medication incidents
  150. MEDICINE NON-ADHERENCE IN KIDNEY TRANSPLANTATION
  151. The effects of physical environments in medical wards on medication communication processes affecting patient safety
  152. Although parents are generally satisfied with their child's postoperative care, children continue to experience moderate-to-severe pain postoperatively
  153. Testing the validity, reliability and utility of the Self-Administration of Medication (SAM) tool in patients undergoing rehabilitation
  154. The barriers and facilitators people with diabetes from a nonEnglish speaking background experience when managing their medications: a qualitative study
  155. What counts as effective communication in nursing? Evidence from nurse educators' and clinicians' feedback on nurse interactions with simulated patients
  156. Medication errors in hospitalised children
  157. The cost-benefit of using soft silicone multilayered foam dressings to prevent sacral and heel pressure ulcers in trauma and critically ill patients: a within-trial analysis of the Border Trial
  158. Exploring motivation and confidence in taking prescribed medicines in coexisting diseases: a qualitative study
  159. Effectiveness of an electronic inpatient medication record in reducing medication errors in Singapore
  160. Medication communication through documentation in medical wards: knowledge and power relations
  161. Quality of life assessment in children commencing home INR self-testing
  162. A Systematic Literature Review of Psychosocial and Behavioral Factors Associated with Initial Medication Adherence: A Report of the ISPOR Medication Adherence & Persistence Special Interest Group
  163. Impact of Interventions on Medication Adherence and Blood Pressure Control in Patients with Essential Hypertension: A Systematic Review by the ISPOR Medication Adherence and Persistence Special Interest Group
  164. Use of the Screening Tool of Older Person's Prescriptions (STOPP) in older people admitted to an Australian hospital
  165. Detection of medication-related problems in hospital practice: a review
  166. Enablers and barriers affecting medication-taking behaviour in aging men with benign prostatic hyperplasia
  167. A randomised controlled trial of the effectiveness of soft silicone multi-layered foam dressings in the prevention of sacral and heel pressure ulcers in trauma and critically ill patients: the border trial
  168. Interventions to improve osteoporosis medication adherence and persistence: a systematic review and literature appraisal by the ISPOR Medication Adherence & Persistence Special Interest Group
  169. The ‘time-out’ procedure: an institutional ethnography of how it is conducted in actual clinical practice
  170. Pain management strategies used during early childhood immunisation in Victoria
  171. Nurses' medication administration practices at two Singaporean acute care hospitals
  172. Communication relating to family members' involvement and understandings about patients' medication management in hospital
  173. Complexities of pain assessment and management in hospitalised older people: A qualitative observation and interview study
  174. Healthcare service provider perceptions of organisational communication across the perioperative pathway: a questionnaire survey
  175. Interventions to reduce medication errors in adult intensive care: a systematic review
  176. Medication communication between nurses and patients during nursing handovers on medical wards: A critical ethnographic study
  177. Medication-related problems occurring in people with diabetes during an admission to an adult teaching hospital: A retrospective cohort study
  178. Medication communication during ward rounds on medical wards: Power relations and spatial practices
  179. Health Professionals' Views of Communication: Implications for Assessing Performance on a Health-Specific English Language Test
  180. A multifactorial intervention to improve blood pressure control in co-existing diabetes and kidney disease: a feasibility randomized controlled trial
  181. Prospective validation of a predictive model that identifies homeless people at risk of re-presentation to the emergency department
  182. Pain Assessment in Hospitalised Older People Observation and Interview Schedules
  183. Testing an Educational Nursing Intervention for Pain Assessment and Management in Older People
  184. The role of documents and documentation in communication failure across the perioperative pathway. A literature review
  185. Patients' and family members' views on how clinicians enact and how they should enact incident disclosure: the "100 patient stories" qualitative study
  186. Understanding medication safety in healthcare settings: a critical review of conceptual models
  187. How can clinicians measure safety and quality in acute care?
  188. Assessing outcome measures of oral anticoagulation management in children
  189. Effect of concomitant opioid analgesics and oral sucrose during heel lancing
  190. Complex health service needs for people who are homeless
  191. Homelessness: patterns of emergency department use and risk factors for re-presentation
  192. International variations in outcomes from sedation protocol research: Where are we at and where do we go from here?
  193. Parental management of childhood complaints: over-the-counter medicine use and advice-seeking behaviours
  194. Medication Adherence in People of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Backgrounds: A Meta-Analysis
  195. Medication communication: a concept analysis
  196. Person-centred interactions between nurses and patients during medication activities in an acute hospital setting: Qualitative observation and interview study
  197. Standard care in diabetic kidney disease: a survey of medical specialists in diabetes and nephrology outpatient clinics
  198. The devil is in the detail - a multifactorial intervention to reduce blood pressure in co-existing diabetes and chronic kidney disease: a single blind, randomized controlled trial
  199. Use of over-the-counter medicines for young children in Australia
  200. Pain assessment and management practices in children following surgery of the lower limb
  201. Anxiety as a factor influencing satisfaction with emergency department care: perspectives of accompanying persons
  202. Repeated Doses of Sucrose in Infants Continue to Reduce Procedural Pain During Prolonged Hospitalizations
  203. Medication Use Across Transition Points from the Emergency Department: Identifying Factors Associated with Medication Discrepancies
  204. Disclosing clinical adverse events to patients: can practice inform policy?
  205. The role of irrational thought in medicine adherence: people with diabetic kidney disease
  206. Sedation Management in Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Units: Doctors' and Nurses' Practices and Opinions
  207. Errors in administration of parenteral medications are a serious safety problem in intensive care units
  208. Pain Assessment and Management in Patients After Abdominal Surgery From PACU to the Postoperative Unit
  209. Analgesics Administered During Minor Painful Procedures in a Cohort of Hospitalized Infants: A Prospective Clinical Audit
  210. Gatekeeping practices of nurses in operating rooms
  211. A critical review of daily sedation interruption in the intensive care unit
  212. Eczema workshops reduce severity of childhood atopic eczema
  213. Utilization of analgesics, sedatives, and pain scores in infants with a prolonged hospitalization: A prospective descriptive cohort study
  214. Australian Mental Health Nurses’ Attitudes to Role Expansion
  215. A framework for planning and critiquing medication compliance and persistence research using prospective study designs
  216. Nurse Practitioners and Medical Practice: Opposing Forces or Complementary Contributions?
  217. Informal Role Expansion in Australian Mental Health Nursing
  218. Pharmacology content in undergraduate nursing programs: Is there enough to support nurses in providing safe and effective care?
  219. Adherence to multiple, prescribed medications in diabetic kidney disease: A qualitative study of consumers’ and health professionals’ perspectives
  220. The authors reply:
  221. Health care professionals’ views of implementing a policy of open disclosure of errors
  222. The power of routine and special observations: producing civility in a public acute psychiatric unit
  223. Patients' and family members' experiences of open disclosure following adverse events
  224. Complexities of communicating about managing medications—An important challenge for nurses: A response to Latter et al. (2007)
  225. Interventions to improve medication adherence in people with multiple chronic conditions: a systematic review
  226. Nurses' perceived barriers to the implementation of a Fall Prevention Clinical Practice Guideline in Singapore hospitals
  227. A randomized trial of protocol-directed sedation management for mechanical ventilation in an Australian intensive care unit*
  228. RESPONSE
  229. The influence of patient acuity on satisfaction with emergency care: perspectives of family, friends and carers
  230. Expanded Practice Roles for Community Mental Health Nurses in Australia: Confidence, Critical Factors for Preparedness, and Perceived Barriers
  231. Managing pain in chronic kidney disease: patient participation in decision-making
  232. Socio-demographic and clinical characteristics of re-presentation to an Australian inner-city emergency department: implications for service delivery
  233. Communication between patients with chronic kidney disease and nurses about managing pain in the acute hospital setting
  234. Homelessness, health status and emergency department use: An integrated review of the literature
  235. Whiteboards: Mediating professional tensions in clinical practice
  236. Balancing safety with effective pain control in patients with chronic kidney disease
  237. Fall incidence and fall prevention practices at acute care hospitals in Singapore: a retrospective audit
  238. Expanded Practice Roles for Community Mental Health Nurses: A Qualitative Exploration of Psychiatrists’ Views
  239. Response
  240. Rethinking nurses’ observations: Psychiatric nursing skills and invisibility in an acute inpatient setting
  241. A structured literature review of pain assessment and management of patients with chronic kidney disease
  242. CORRECTIONS
  243. Managing Complex Medication Regimens: Perspectives of Consumers with Osteoarthritis and Healthcare Professionals
  244. Bacterial contamination of oral sucrose solutions
  245. Continuity of care and general wellbeing of patients with comorbidities requiring joint replacement
  246. Medication errors and adverse drug events in an intensive care unit
  247. EXPLORING THE EXPANDED PRACTICE ROLES OF COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH NURSES
  248. Nurses?? Reassessment of Postoperative Pain After Analgesic Administration
  249. EXPANDED PRACTICE ROLES FOR COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH NURSES: WHAT DO CONSUMERS AND CARERS HAVE TO SAY?
  250. Governing the Operating Room List
  251. Nurse-led clinics reduce severity of childhood atopic eczema: a review of the literature
  252. Governing the surgical count through communication interactions: implications for patient safety
  253. The impact of role discrepancy on nurses' intention to quit their jobs
  254. Patients’ Decision-Making Strategies for Managing Postoperative Pain
  255. 'She's manipulative and he's right off': A critical analysis of psychiatric nurses' oral and written language in the acute inpatient setting
  256. Development and Validation of the Self-Administration of Medication Tool
  257. Role discrepancy: is it a common problem among nurses?
  258. Governing time in operating rooms
  259. Governance in operating room nursing: Nurses’ knowledge of individual surgeons
  260. Impact of the perceived public image of nursing on nurses' work behaviour
  261. Documentation of medication management by graduate nurses in patient progress notes: A way forward for patient safety
  262. Explaining nurses’ work behaviour from their perception of the environment and work values
  263. ERRATUM: RE: ORAL SUCROSE FOR PROCEDURAL PAIN IN SICK HOSPITALIZED INFANTS: A RANDOMIZED-CONTROLLED TRIAL (J. Paediatr. Child Health 2003; 39: 591-7)1
  264. How graduate nurses use protocols to manage patients’ medications
  265. Nurses' job dissatisfaction and turnover intention: Methodological myths and an alternative approach
  266. Nurses’ Strategies for Managing Pain in the Postoperative Setting
  267. Graduate nurses’ communication with health professionals when managing patients’ medications
  268. Rethinking theatre in modern operating rooms
  269. The problem of postoperative pain: Issues for future research
  270. Perspectives of a nurse, a social worker and a psychiatrist regarding patient assessment in acute inpatient psychiatry settings: a case study approach
  271. Assessment of Patient Pain in the Postoperative Context
  272. The uses of photography in clinical nursing practice and research: a literature review
  273. Decision-making models used by 'graduate nurses' managing patients' medications
  274. Pain assessment and management in critically ill intubated patients: a retrospective study
  275. Medication management by graduate nurses: Before, during and following medication administration
  276. Self-administration of medication in hospital: patients' perspectives
  277. Agency nursing work in acute care settings: perceptions of hospital nursing managers and agency nurse providers
  278. Snap-shots of live theatre: the use of photography to research governance in operating room nursing
  279. Transcultural nursing in Australian nursing curricula
  280. Agency-nursing work: perceptions and experiences of agency nurses
  281. Medication trends and documentation of pain management following surgery
  282. Pain and anxiety management in the postoperative gastro-surgical setting
  283. Achieving collaborative workplace learning in a university critical care course
  284. Agency nursing in Melbourne, Australia: a telephone survey of hospital and agency managers
  285. Observation of pain assessment and management − the complexities of clinical practice
  286. Practices and predictions of analgesic interventions for adults undergoing painful procedures
  287. The educational preparation of undergraduate nursing students in pharmacology: clinical nurses’ perceptions and experiences of graduate nurses’ medication knowledge
  288. The educational preparation of undergraduate nursing students in pharmacology: a survey of lecturers' perceptions and experiences
  289. The educational preparation of undergraduate nursing students in pharmacology: perceptions and experiences of lecturers and students
  290. Foucault could have been an operating room nurse
  291. Acute pain management: Implications of scientific evidence for nursing practice in the postoperative context
  292. Nurse-doctor interactions during critical care ward rounds
  293. The interplay of knowledge and decision making between nurses and doctors in critical care
  294. Nurses and doctors communicating through medication order charts in critical care
  295. Rethinking ethnography: reconstructing nursing relationships
  296. Professional journalling over time: position of the inside nurse–researcher in intensive care