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AAN News & Opinion
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- Practice Guidelines
Improve nurses’ well-being and joy in work: Implement true interprofessional teams and address electronic health record usability issues
Nursing OutlookVol. 67Issue 6p791–797Published in issue: November, 2019- Diane K. Boyle
- Marianne Baernholdt
- Jeffrey M. Adams
- Susan McBride
- Ellen Harper
- Lusine Poghosyan
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 13The three components of the Triple Aim – enhancing the patient experience, improving population health, and reducing costs – have become the guide for optimizing healthcare system performance in the U.S. (Berwick, Nolan, & Whittington, 2008; Sikka, Morath, & Leape, 2015). The three aims are intrinsically intertwined and therefore need to be addressed simultaneously. However, constant efforts to maintain a harmonious balance of the Triple Aim is a challenge and often causes unintended consequences especially as it relates to a consistent change in clinician work processes, decreased joy in work, and burnout (Dyrbye et al., 2017; Shanafelt et al., 2016). - Practice Guidelines
Call for action: Nurses must play a critical role to enhance health literacy
Nursing OutlookVol. 66Issue 1p97–100Published online: November 27, 2017- Lori A. Loan
- Terri Ann Parnell
- Jaynelle F. Stichler
- Diane K. Boyle
- Patricia Allen
- Christopher A. VanFosson
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 38Health literacy is a precursor to health and achievement of a culture of health (Barton et al., 2017). Patient empowerment, engagement, activation, and maximized health outcomes will not be achieved unless assurance of health literacy is applied universally for every patient, every time, in every health care encounter, and across all environments of care. Organizations such as the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) endorse the use of available resources such as the Health Literacy Universal Precaution Toolkit (Brega et al., 2015).