J
Jocelyn Bennett
Researcher at Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto
Publications - 11
Citations - 2174
Jocelyn Bennett is an academic researcher from Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Acute care. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 11 publications receiving 1654 citations. Previous affiliations of Jocelyn Bennett include University of Toronto.
Papers
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Journal Article
The immediate psychological and occupational impact of the 2003 SARS outbreak in a teaching hospital
Robert G. Maunder,Jonathan Hunter,Leslie Vincent,Jocelyn Bennett,Nathalie Peladeau,Molyn Leszcz,Joel Sadavoy,Lieve M. Verhaeghe,Rosalie Steinberg,Tony Mazzulli +9 more
TL;DR: The psychological and occupational impact of this event within a large hospital in the first 4 weeks of the SARS outbreak and the subsequent administrative and mental health response is described.
Journal ArticleDOI
Long-term psychological and occupational effects of providing hospital healthcare during SARS outbreak.
Robert G. Maunder,William J. Lancee,Kenneth E. Balderson,Jocelyn Bennett,Bjug Borgundvaag,Susan E. Evans,Christopher M.B. Fernandes,David S. Goldbloom,Mona Gupta,Jonathan Hunter,Linda McGillis Hall,Lynn M. Nagle,Clare Pain,Sonia S. Peczeniuk,Glenna Raymond,Nancy Read,Sean B. Rourke,Rosalie Steinberg,Thomas E. Stewart,Susan VanDeVelde-Coke,Georgina G. Veldhorst,Donald Wasylenki +21 more
TL;DR: Hospital workers in hospitals affected by SARS experience increased psychological stress 1–2 years after the outbreak, according to a report from the World Health Organization.
Journal ArticleDOI
Patterns of handwashing behavior and visits to patients on a general medical ward of healthcare workers.
Janet Raboud,Refik Saskin,Kurt Wong,Christine Moore,Grace Parucha,Jocelyn Bennett,Karen Green,Don E. Low,Mark Loeb,Andy Simor,Allison McGeer +10 more
TL;DR: Education programs about hand hygiene may be more effective if patterns of care and levels of risk are incorporated into recommendations, and nurses adjusted their handwashing rates in accordance with the risk level of each visit.
Journal Article
Improving medication administration systems: an evaluation study.
TL;DR: Study results demonstrated benefits associated with decentralizing the medication distribution to the bedside, including nurses spending more time with patients, nurses investing less time preparing and distributing medication and fewer interruptions for nurses as they prepared and distributed medication.
Journal ArticleDOI
Critical care services in Ontario : a survey-based assessment of current and future resource needs
Andrea D. Hill,Eddy Fan,Eddy Fan,Thomas E. Stewart,Thomas E. Stewart,Thomas E. Stewart,William J. Sibbald,William J. Sibbald,Eric Nauenberg,Bernard Lawless,Jocelyn Bennett,Claudio Martin +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the availability of critical care resources, forecast the future requirement for the highest-level critical care beds and to determine the physician management models in critical care units in Ontario, Canada.