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Nurses'
Long Work Hours, Scheduling can increase
Patient Mortality
Newswise, January 17, 2011 — A new study has
found that patient deaths from pneumonia and
acute myocardial infarction were
significantly more likely in hospitals where
nurses reported schedules with long work
hours.
The finding
was just one of several revelations from a
study of nurses' work schedules, patient
outcomes, and staffing led by University of
Maryland School of Nursing researchers in
collaboration with researchers at the Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine.
The study is
the latest in ongoing research on nurse
scheduling and staffing funded by the
National Council of State Boards of Nursing.
In the current study, Alison Trinkoff, ScD,
MPH, RN, FAAN, professor at the School, and
co-authors Meg Johantgen, PhD, RN; Carla
Storr, PhD, MPH, RN; Yulan Liang, PhD; Ayse
Gurses, PhD;and Kihye Han, MD, RN shifted
their focus from the effects on nurses in
previous studies to patient well-being.
The team
linked patient outcome and staffing
information from 71 acute care hospitals in
two representative states (Illinois and
North Carolina) with the survey responses of
633 randomly selected nurses who worked in
these hospitals.
Their findings
are published in "Nurses' Work Schedule
Characteristics, Nurse Staffing, and Patient
Mortality," in the January/February issue of
the journal Nursing
Research. Most U.S. hospitals use 12-hour
nursing shifts exclusively, as opposed to
eight-hour shifts, a trend begun during
nursing shortages nationwide in the 1980s.
"Although many nurses like these schedules
because of the compressed nature of the
workweek, the long schedule?as well as shift
work in general?lead to sleep deprivation,"
says Trinkoff.
"Alertness and
vigilance required for providing good
nursing care depend upon having an adequate
duration of quality sleep and rest," says
Trinkoff, "and long work hours can impact
the quality of nursing care and can increase
the potential for error."
"Nursing work
hours may also be increasing to compensate
for decreasing physician work hours in
hospitals because the medical profession has
taken steps to limit the hours a physician
in training may work, whereas nursing has
not taken similar steps," says Trinkoff.
In the new
study, the work schedule component that was
most frequently related to mortality, along
with long work hours, was lack of time off
the job.
Trinkoff and
colleagues previously found that lack of
time off was also an important factor
contributing to nurse injury and fatigue.
Nurses need time off to rest and recuperate
to protect their health and similarly, the
lack of recovery time may affect performance
on the job, she says.
"The finding
that work schedule can impact patient
outcomes is ýimportant and should lead to
further study and examination of nursing
work schedules ," says Trinkoff.
In a previous
paper, Trinkoff and co-authors reviewed
evidence to challenge the 12-hour shift
paradigm, which can result in sleep
deprivation, health problems, and greater
chance for patient errors.
In another paper,
they described barriers that keep nursing
executives from moving away from the
practice, and they offered strategies to
help mitigate possible negative effects of
12- hour shifts. The strategies were based
on the authors' extensive research,
surveying, and experience in the nursing
profession.
"Now that we
have data that these conditions affect the
public adversely, there is even more reason
for providers in each hospital and clinic to
look at the situation and find solutions,"
says Trinkoff.