C
Christine Duffield
Researcher at Edith Cowan University
Publications - 230
Citations - 13552
Christine Duffield is an academic researcher from Edith Cowan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Nurse education. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 227 publications receiving 12238 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine Duffield include University of Western Sydney & University of Michigan.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Delphi method
TL;DR: The Delphi method was originally developed in the 50s by the RAND Corporation and was used more often especially for national science and technology foresight and therefore the value of the process as such was acknowledged.
Journal ArticleDOI
Nurse turnover: A literature review
Laureen Hayes,Linda O'Brien-Pallas,Christine Duffield,Judith Shamian,James Buchan,Frances Hughes,Frances Hughes,Heather K. Spence Laschinger,Nicola North,Patricia W. Stone +9 more
TL;DR: A comprehensive literature review was undertaken to examine the current state of knowledge about the scope of the nurse turnover problem, definitions of turnover, factors considered to be determinants of nurse turnover, turnover costs and the impact of turnover on patient, and nurse and system outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Nurse turnover: A literature review - An update
Laureen Hayes,Linda O'Brien-Pallas,Christine Duffield,Judith Shamian,James Buchan,Frances Hughes,Heather K. Spence Laschinger,Nicola North +7 more
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the related literature to examine recent findings related to the issue of nursing turnover and its causes and consequences and to identify on methodological challenges and the implications of new evidence for future studies is conducted.
Journal Article
The Delphi technique.
TL;DR: The Delphi technique is an easy-to-use research instrument which has become an accepted method of achieving consensus among individuals and experts and some advantages and disadvantages are described.
Journal ArticleDOI
Nursing staffing, nursing workload, the work environment and patient outcomes
Christine Duffield,Donna Diers,Donna Diers,Linda O'Brien-Pallas,Chris Aisbett,Michael Roche,Madeleine King,Kate Aisbett +7 more
TL;DR: Nurse staffing (fewer RNs), increased workload, and unstable nursing unit environments were linked to negative patient outcomes including falls and medication errors on medical/surgical units in a mixed method study combining longitudinal data (5 years) and primary data collection.