letter to the higher authoritie
s to increase the facilities of staff nurse
Answers
Sender address
Ak Mukherjee road
Noapara, Signature apartment
Kolkata: 700090
Date: 31 August 2021
Receiver address
Binayak hospital
59 KC Ghosh road
Kolkata: 700050
Salutation - Dear madam/sir
Subject - Increase the facilities of staff nurse
Nursing is a critical factor in determining the quality of care in hospitals and the nature of patient outcomes. Twenty-four-hour nursing care is one of the distinctive hallmarks of inpatient care in hospitals. Historically, hospitals have been at the core of the U.S. health care system, and nursing services are central to the provision of hospital care. They have also functioned as the traditional place of work for nursing personnel and especially for registered nurses (RN). Nursing personnel comprises the largest proportion of patient caregivers in a hospital. Nursing care in hospitals takes on added importance today because the increase in acuity of patients requires intensive nursing care.
In recent years, the nursing profession has been especially concerned about the nature of the transformation taking place in the health care sector. Reports of hiring freezes and layoffs of RNs in hospitals have led to increased apprehension among them and their supporting organizations about the potential threat to the quality of patient care in hospitals as well as their physical and economic well-being. RNs have expressed concerns that hospitals are implementing a variety of nursing care delivery systems involving major staff substitutions, reducing the proportion of RNs to other nursing personnel by replacing them with lesser-trained (and at times untrained), and lower-salaried, personnel at a time when the increasing complexity of hospital inpatient caseloads calls for more skilled nursing care.
At the same time, the aggregate quantity of RNs is at a high level, creating uncertainties about job security. Much health care is moving to ambulatory settings, the community, and the home through home health services. The nursing profession also has concerns about the training needs to accommodate these shifts in work settings. With respect to the hospital setting, a rapidly changing health care environment, continuing pressures to contain costs, and the rising levels of severity of illness and comorbidity of inpatients all make it imperative for hospitals to explore innovative ways to redesign the delivery of care without compromising quality.
I hope that you will work beyond this letter
Thank you
Yours truely
Gyaneshwar singh