A British nurse, Florence Nightingale who laid the foundation for occupational therapy, said, "As the first request of the hospital, patients should be made harmless, which seems to be a strange principle." Attempts to maintain low cost and hire high quality nurses make the ratio of nurses to patients a problem for patient care. The impact of not having an appropriate nurse on the lowest percentage of patients affects not only the patient and nurse's body but also the hospital's economy.
What is the ideal ratio of patients to nurses? In 2004, California became the first province to set "safe staffing percentage". At that time, the law stipulated that in most divisions the proportion of 1 in 5 people was nurses. For ICU, this ratio is 1: 2. This law is sponsored by the California Nurses Association. This is the gold standard for the current leaders' attempt to establish a national agreement on such a safety factor. S. 1063 is Senator's bill, sponsored by Sherrod Brown (D - OH), to determine emergency medical facility requirements to ensure that the lowest ratio is always maintained.
In today's care field, we are working on improving hospital patient care. Several US states are considering introducing the Care Level Act. With the ratio method, the hospital always needs to enforce a strict ratio of nurses and patients. So far only California has paid a certain percentage of attention and is subject to a combined review. Legislative measures took place throughout the 1990s when California health care associations tried to enforce nursery law by legislation and voting. The California State Nurses Association (CNA) has worked for many years in California to establish a mandatory nurse-patient ratio system.
Dr. Linda Aikin, a nurse at the University of Pennsylvania, examined the proportion of nurses to patients in California, her team said that California hospital nurses averaged patient care over other nurses I found out that I have received it. The country and lower proportion are associated with significantly lower mortality