What can we learn from the existing evidence of the business case for investments in nursing care: Importance of content, context, and policy environment

Olga Yakusheva, Douglas Wholey, Kevin Frick

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Decisions of health care institutions to invest in nursing care are often guided by mixed and conflicting evidence of effects of the investments on organizational function and sustainability. This paper uses new evidence generated through Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Initiative (INQRI)-funded research and published in peer-reviewed journals, to illustrate where the business case for nursing investments stands and to discuss factors that may limit the existing evidence and its transferability into clinical practice. We conclude that there are 3 limiting factors: (1) the existing business case for nursing investments is likely understated due to the inability of most studies to capture spillover and long-run dynamic effects, thus causing organizations to forfeit potentially viable nursing investments that may improve long-term financial stability; (2) studies rarely devote sufficient attention to describing the content and the organization-specific contextual factors, thus limiting generalizability; and (3) fragmentation of the current health care delivery and payment systems often leads to the financial benefits of investments in nursing care accruing outside of the organization incurring the costs, thus making potentially quality-improving and cost-saving interventions financially unattractive from the organization's perspective. The payment reform, with its emphasis on high-quality affordable patient-centered care, is likely to strengthen the business case for investments in nursing care. Methodologically rigorous approaches that focus on broader societal implications of investments in nursing care, combined with a thorough understanding of potential barriers and facilitators of nursing change, should be an integral part of future research and policy efforts.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)S47-S52
JournalMedical care
Volume51
Issue number4 SUPPL. 2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2013

Keywords

  • business case
  • nursing

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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