Nurses' extended work hours: Patient, nurse and organizational outcomes

© 2015 International Council of Nurses. Background: Nursing shortages have been associated with increased nurse workloads that may result in work errors, thus impacting patient, nurse and organizational outcomes. Aim: To examine for the first time in Thailand nurses' extended work hours (workin...

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Main Authors: W. Kunaviktikul, O. Wichaikhum, A. Nantsupawat, R. Nantsupawat, R. Chontawan, A. Klunklin, S. Roongruangsri, P. Nantachaipan, T. Supamanee, B. Chitpakdee, T. Akkadechanunt, S. Sirakamon
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Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/54830
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-548302018-09-04T10:24:33Z Nurses' extended work hours: Patient, nurse and organizational outcomes W. Kunaviktikul O. Wichaikhum A. Nantsupawat R. Nantsupawat R. Chontawan A. Klunklin S. Roongruangsri P. Nantachaipan T. Supamanee B. Chitpakdee T. Akkadechanunt S. Sirakamon Nursing © 2015 International Council of Nurses. Background: Nursing shortages have been associated with increased nurse workloads that may result in work errors, thus impacting patient, nurse and organizational outcomes. Aim: To examine for the first time in Thailand nurses' extended work hours (working more than 40h per week) and its relationship to patient, nurse and organizational outcomes. Methods: Using multistage sampling, 1524 registered nurses working in 90 hospitals across Thailand completed demographic forms: the Nurses' Extended Work Hours Form; the Patient, Nurse, Organizational Outcomes Form; the Organizational Productivity Questionnaire and the Maslach Burnout Inventory. The data were analysed using descriptive statistics, Spearman's rank correlation and logistic regression. Results: The average extended work hour of respondents was 18.82h per week. About 80% worked two consecutive shifts. The extended work hours had a positive correlation with patient outcomes, such as patient identification errors, pressure ulcers, communication errors and patient complaints and with nurse outcomes of emotional exhaustion and depersonalization. Furthermore, we found a negative correlation between extended work hours and job satisfaction as a whole, intent to stay and organizational productivity. Nurses who had extended work hours of >16h per week were significantly more likely to perceive all four adverse patient outcomes than participants working an extended ≤8h per week. Limitations: Patient outcomes were measured by respondents' self-reports. This may not always reflect the real occurrence of adverse events. Conclusions: Associations between extended work hours and outcomes for patients, nurses and the organization were found. The findings demonstrate that working two shifts (16h) more than the regular work hours lead to negative outcomes for patients, nurses and the organization. Implications for nursing and health policy: Our findings add to increasing international evidence that nurses' poor working conditions result in negative outcomes for professionals, patients and health systems. Policymakers need to be aware of the issues regarding nurses' extended work hours, which has been found to contribute to burnout. Urgently, nurse and health administrators need to develop and implement appropriate nursing overtime policies and strategies to help reduce this phenomenon, including measures to overcome the nursing shortage. International Nursing Review 2018-09-04T10:24:33Z 2018-09-04T10:24:33Z 2015-01-01 Journal 14667657 00208132 2-s2.0-84940437014 10.1111/inr.12195 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84940437014&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/54830
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Nursing
spellingShingle Nursing
W. Kunaviktikul
O. Wichaikhum
A. Nantsupawat
R. Nantsupawat
R. Chontawan
A. Klunklin
S. Roongruangsri
P. Nantachaipan
T. Supamanee
B. Chitpakdee
T. Akkadechanunt
S. Sirakamon
Nurses' extended work hours: Patient, nurse and organizational outcomes
description © 2015 International Council of Nurses. Background: Nursing shortages have been associated with increased nurse workloads that may result in work errors, thus impacting patient, nurse and organizational outcomes. Aim: To examine for the first time in Thailand nurses' extended work hours (working more than 40h per week) and its relationship to patient, nurse and organizational outcomes. Methods: Using multistage sampling, 1524 registered nurses working in 90 hospitals across Thailand completed demographic forms: the Nurses' Extended Work Hours Form; the Patient, Nurse, Organizational Outcomes Form; the Organizational Productivity Questionnaire and the Maslach Burnout Inventory. The data were analysed using descriptive statistics, Spearman's rank correlation and logistic regression. Results: The average extended work hour of respondents was 18.82h per week. About 80% worked two consecutive shifts. The extended work hours had a positive correlation with patient outcomes, such as patient identification errors, pressure ulcers, communication errors and patient complaints and with nurse outcomes of emotional exhaustion and depersonalization. Furthermore, we found a negative correlation between extended work hours and job satisfaction as a whole, intent to stay and organizational productivity. Nurses who had extended work hours of >16h per week were significantly more likely to perceive all four adverse patient outcomes than participants working an extended ≤8h per week. Limitations: Patient outcomes were measured by respondents' self-reports. This may not always reflect the real occurrence of adverse events. Conclusions: Associations between extended work hours and outcomes for patients, nurses and the organization were found. The findings demonstrate that working two shifts (16h) more than the regular work hours lead to negative outcomes for patients, nurses and the organization. Implications for nursing and health policy: Our findings add to increasing international evidence that nurses' poor working conditions result in negative outcomes for professionals, patients and health systems. Policymakers need to be aware of the issues regarding nurses' extended work hours, which has been found to contribute to burnout. Urgently, nurse and health administrators need to develop and implement appropriate nursing overtime policies and strategies to help reduce this phenomenon, including measures to overcome the nursing shortage. International Nursing Review
format Journal
author W. Kunaviktikul
O. Wichaikhum
A. Nantsupawat
R. Nantsupawat
R. Chontawan
A. Klunklin
S. Roongruangsri
P. Nantachaipan
T. Supamanee
B. Chitpakdee
T. Akkadechanunt
S. Sirakamon
author_facet W. Kunaviktikul
O. Wichaikhum
A. Nantsupawat
R. Nantsupawat
R. Chontawan
A. Klunklin
S. Roongruangsri
P. Nantachaipan
T. Supamanee
B. Chitpakdee
T. Akkadechanunt
S. Sirakamon
author_sort W. Kunaviktikul
title Nurses' extended work hours: Patient, nurse and organizational outcomes
title_short Nurses' extended work hours: Patient, nurse and organizational outcomes
title_full Nurses' extended work hours: Patient, nurse and organizational outcomes
title_fullStr Nurses' extended work hours: Patient, nurse and organizational outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Nurses' extended work hours: Patient, nurse and organizational outcomes
title_sort nurses' extended work hours: patient, nurse and organizational outcomes
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84940437014&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/54830
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