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An examination of nurse-authored patents: Implications for nursing practice.

Charles R DavisMary Ellen Smith Glasgow
Published in: Nursing forum (2020)
More than 65 000 patents were identified with the terms "medical device" and "medical instrument." From the 65 000+ patent-population, 100 random patents were analyzed for the purposes of this first study and none were determined to have a nurse listed as a participating inventor or innovator. As a result of this analysis, the authors: (a) identify that nurses are largely unrecognized in the medical device invention and innovation space and (b) create models that explain nurses' engagement in this space from (i) historical and contemporary perspectives and (ii) for enhanced future involvement in healthcare patent activities. The future model is especially important as it provides a pathway for nurses to enhance their inventive and innovative competencies, effectiveness, and efficiency through new professional roles, additional education, creation of new educational programs, and formation of professional collaborations. It also calls for organizations that employ nurses to overtly allocate time, resources, and support for invention and innovation activities. We posit that fostering and facilitating nurses to enter the medical invention and innovation space stimulates discoveries that can improve patient care experiences, operations, and outcomes, reduce healthcare costs and provide myriad benefits to these professionals and the organizations that employ them. Examples of benefits from nursing inventions and innovations include prestige, scholarship, and the financial assets associated with intellectual property (ie, patents awarded) for both the nurse and the employing institution. Furthermore, direct involvement and engagement in inventions and innovations define a new practice space and contribution for nurses.
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