V. Susan Dahinten
University of British Columbia
44 Papers
157 Citations
V. Susan Dahinten is an academic researcher from University of British Columbia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Patient safety. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 37 publications.
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Papers
The Impact of Heavy Perceived Nurse Workloads on Patient and Nurse Outcomes
TL;DR: Administrators should work collaboratively with nurses to identify work environment strategies that ameliorate workload demands at different levels to improve patient and nurse outcomes.
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The emerging use of social media for health-related purposes in low and middle-income countries: A scoping review
TL;DR: Social media has the ability to facilitate disease surveillance, mass communication, health education, knowledge translation, and collaboration amongst health providers in low- and middle-income countries.
170
Safety Culture, Patient Safety, and Quality of Care Outcomes: A Literature Review:
Seung Eun Lee,Linda D. Scott,V. Susan Dahinten,Catherine Vincent,Karen Dunn Lopez,Chang Gi Park +5 more
TL;DR: This integrative literature review revealed a large array of nonsignificant and inconsistent relationships between safety culture and patient safety and quality of care outcomes in hospital settings.
162
Factors related to perioperative nurses' job satisfaction and intention to leave
TL;DR: The findings suggest that nurse managers should create an empowering and open work environment that fosters perioperative nurses' job satisfaction and reduces their intention to leave.
81
Psychological Safety as a Mediator of the Relationship Between Inclusive Leadership and Nurse Voice Behaviors and Error Reporting.
Seung Eun Lee,V. Susan Dahinten +1 more
TL;DR: Choi et al. as discussed by the authors used a web-based survey to obtain data from 526 nurses from the medical/surgical units of three tertiary general hospitals located in two cities in South Korea to examine whether the effect of inclusive leadership on the three outcome variables was mediated by psychological safety.
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