Patients exposed to understaffed nursing shifts have a significantly
greater chance of suffering conditions such as surgical wound
infections, pressure injuries, urinary tract infections and pneumonia.
This finding from an Edith Cowan University study that analysed two years of local hospital data involving 36,529 patients.
In total, 17,025 (46.6 per cent) were exposed to at least one understaffed shift.
This led to a three to eight per cent higher chance of suffering an adverse nurse-sensitive outcome (NSO).
Co-author Helen Myers says the study took a novel patient-centred approach to evaluating the staffing/patient care relationship.
"The difficulty with this sort of research is that it is usually done
at the hospital level, looking at outcomes by wards or from an overall
perspective," she says.
"But hospitals are incredibly complex environments, and patients go
to many wards, so we assigned structural variables taking movements into
account to work out if patients had been exposed to understaffed shifts
during any part of their stay.
"We wanted to add more precision to evaluating the problem."
Non-urgent issues rise with less nurses
While understaffed shifts weren't a factor in major health events
such as pulmonary failure, cardiac arrest or shock the researchers found
a significant increase in non-urgent conditions.
"If a major event occurs, people are going to notice," Ms Myers says.
"But the smaller issues indicate an effect on the surveillance role nurses have.
"They are in the best position to detect changes in a patient at an
early stage, effectively stopping minor health issues before they
escalate into major problems."
Stopping adverse NSOs saves both patient suffering and money for the
healthcare system, with each incidence adding an estimated $8000 and one
week to the cost of care.
Ms Myers says putting a number value on nurse staffing
levels is part of an on-going ECU project, with researchers seeking to
gather hard evidence to protect the profession and the public.
She points to cutbacks in the UK health system.
"To date, we haven't seen a major problem with understaffing in
Western Australian hospitals, but there are always economic pressures on
the healthcare sector, with nurses having been a target in
restructuring overseas," she says.
"We need to ensure an adequate number of nurses for patient well-being and make sure that our nurses are supported."
She says short-staffing can be structural, such as a shortage in graduates, geographical or related to workplace conditions.
SOURCE:
Medicalxpress and Provided by
Science Network WA



No comments:
Post a Comment