Managing uncertainty in the emergency department

Share:

This Yorkshire and Humber ARC study investigated whether emergency doctors’ ability to tolerate uncertainty (UT) affects patient outcomes and healthcare resource use.

The researchers examined data from 39 emergency doctors and 384 patient cases. They found that higher UT was not associated with worse patient outcomes or higher resource use, although there were some small associations suggesting higher UT may lead to slightly lower resource utilisation. Additionally, doctors with higher UT reported higher resilience and lower burnout. While the findings were not definitive, the study suggests that interventions to help emergency doctors better manage uncertainty could benefit the doctors themselves without negatively impacting patient care.

Details:

Status:
Complete

Other projects

Be Well Work Well: A longitudinal cohort study to understand and improve health and social care staff wellbeing and retention

There is a workforce crisis in health and social care in the UK, with rising levels of anxiety, exhaustion, stress and burnout among staff: NHS staff are, for example, 50%...

Improvement Science input into: Developing a school-based intervention to improve asthma management in children and young people in Bradford: asthma control in educational settings.

This project was funded by the Yorkshire and Humber Patient Safety Translational Research Centre and is led by a GP respiratory lead, with support from the Improvement Science theme. Children...

Volatile biomarker positioning of nasogastric tubes to enhance patient safety (acronym: NG-Sure)

Naso-gastric (NG) tubes (a tube passed down a person’s nostril into the oesophagus then stomach) provide feeds/medicines to patients if they cannot swallow/take fluids by mouth, or need intensive care/surgery....

Do you have a research idea or want to learn more about our work and how it could be implemented in your area?