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#staffretention — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #staffretention, aggregated by home.social.

  1. #StaffRetention and #mortality | The BMJ bmj.com/content/387/bmj.q2521 “Organisational factors such as culture, staffing, and retention of staff are crucial to #PatientSafety. In a linked study covering nine years of monthly data from all NHS acute trusts in England, Moscelli and colleagues showed that a high #turnover of senior doctors (hospital consultants and specialty associated doctors) and nurses in hospitals is associated with increased mortality for patients admitted for emergencies”

  2. #StaffRetention and #mortality | The BMJ bmj.com/content/387/bmj.q2521 “Organisational factors such as culture, staffing, and retention of staff are crucial to #PatientSafety. In a linked study covering nine years of monthly data from all NHS acute trusts in England, Moscelli and colleagues showed that a high #turnover of senior doctors (hospital consultants and specialty associated doctors) and nurses in hospitals is associated with increased mortality for patients admitted for emergencies”

  3. #StaffRetention and #mortality | The BMJ bmj.com/content/387/bmj.q2521 “Organisational factors such as culture, staffing, and retention of staff are crucial to #PatientSafety. In a linked study covering nine years of monthly data from all NHS acute trusts in England, Moscelli and colleagues showed that a high #turnover of senior doctors (hospital consultants and specialty associated doctors) and nurses in hospitals is associated with increased mortality for patients admitted for emergencies”

  4. #StaffRetention and #mortality | The BMJ bmj.com/content/387/bmj.q2521 “Organisational factors such as culture, staffing, and retention of staff are crucial to #PatientSafety. In a linked study covering nine years of monthly data from all NHS acute trusts in England, Moscelli and colleagues showed that a high #turnover of senior doctors (hospital consultants and specialty associated doctors) and nurses in hospitals is associated with increased mortality for patients admitted for emergencies”

  5. #StaffRetention and #mortality | The BMJ bmj.com/content/387/bmj.q2521 “Organisational factors such as culture, staffing, and retention of staff are crucial to #PatientSafety. In a linked study covering nine years of monthly data from all NHS acute trusts in England, Moscelli and colleagues showed that a high #turnover of senior doctors (hospital consultants and specialty associated doctors) and nurses in hospitals is associated with increased mortality for patients admitted for emergencies”