https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sodium-acrylate.html A cohort review was conducted at a central London tertiary care hospital trust on the prevalence of homelessness among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive inpatients over a year. Data were collected on the duration of inpatient stay, co-morbidities including acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-defining illnesses, co-infections, initiation of antiretroviral therapy, CD4 cell count, HIV viral load and substance misuse. Homeless people were found to be at high risk for hepatitis C, mental health illness, substance misuse including injecting drug use, recurrent bacterial infections, AIDS-associated illnesses, lower CD4 cell counts and HIV viremia. They also had more missed HIV outpatient appointments. It was highlighted that a multidisciplinary approach in their care was necessary to address their needs and reduce the morbidity burden in this cohort.We aim to identify associations that may help support strategies to increase job satisfaction and reduce unscheduled time off work for nurses. Given current concerns regarding nursing workforce and retention, it is vital we identify strategies and factors which maintain job satisfaction, support staff retention and reduce unscheduled time off work. As part of a quality improvement project, we conducted and distributed an online anonymous survey. Likert scales were used to measure job satisfaction, perceived quality of care, wellbeing, and unscheduled time off work. We explored participation in project work of any kind in the preceding 12 months, and captured nursing experience and current area of practice (inpatient/outpatient). A total of 350 complete responses were analysed. Nurses engaged in research or Quality Improvement Projects (QIPs) were more likely to have higher perceived levels of patient care (p = 0.0001), wellbeing (p = 0.0001) and job satisfaction (p = 0.0001) and reported lower levels of unscheduled time off work (p = 0.0001). Nurses eng