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Policy, Politics, & Nursing Practice, Vol. 9, No. 2, 112-117 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1527154408319452

Measuring and Accounting for the Intensity of Nursing Care

Is It Worthwhile?

Steven A. Finkler, PhD, CPA

New York University

In June 2007, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation sponsored a conference titled "The Economics of Nursing: Paying for Quality Nursing Care." The second topic at the conference was "the appropriateness and feasibility of measuring and accounting for the intensity of nursing care." Drs. Welton and Sermeus presented papers on that topic. This response to those papers focuses on why the hospital industry has not always accounted for and measured nursing intensity. Then it asks, "Why do we want more accurate information about nursing resources used by different patients?" It is not sufficient to say the data regarding nursing costs are not accurate. Nor is it sufficient to say that we now can improve the accuracy of the data. To move forward in this area, we need to develop compelling evidence and arguments that indicate that nursing-cost data of greater accuracy have a benefit that will exceed the costs of that data collection.

Key Words: payment for nursing • nursing intensity • measuring nursing intensity


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