Effect of 12 Hour Shifts on Patient Care and the Nurse: A Need for Change.

Many nurses find it difficult to work 12 hour shifts both physically and cognitively. Research has shown working 12 hour shifts often effect nurses’ critical thinking, productivity and job satisfaction which impacts patient care and patient safety. This Article discusses a change theory which can be used to implement changes to the current practice of working 12 hour shifts. Nurses General Nursing Article

The nursing profession has evolved over the years which includes working conditions, duties, skills, educational and practice standards, technology, regulations and policies. Many of these changes occurred as the result of research and evidence-based practice. There has always been a focus on patient safety and decreasing and preventing medication errors. Research has shown working 12 hour shifts often effect nurses’ critical thinking, productivity and job satisfaction which impacts patient care and patient safety. This Article will discuss how the Lewin change model can be used to implement changes to the current practice of hospital staff nurses working 12 hour shifts. The primary people effected are hospital staff nurses, patients, nurse managers and nursing supervisors.

What are Goals of the Change?

  • Decrease nurse fatigue
  • Optimize the nurse’s critical thinking
  • Increase productivity
  • Increase job satisfaction which will result in reduced rate of medication errors
  • Improve quality of patient care

According to Kearney-Nunnery (2016) Kurt Lewin’s change model consisted of three main components: unfreezing, moving, and refreezing. “To achieve change, the restraining forces must be weakened and the driving forces strengthened” (Kearney-Nunnery, 2016, p.183). Restraining forces are forces that resist change. Pertaining to the 12 hour shifts, restraining forces for nurses include ability to “work less hours and days, and potentially have an improved work/life balance” (Rollins, 2015, p.162), (Ball, Dall’Ora & Griffiths, 2015). Restraining forces for hospitals include paying less overtime, less dependency on agency nurses and scheduling coverage for only 2 shifts. Patients and families tend to like having the same nurse for the longer part of the day and “having fewer names and faces to remember” (Rollins, 2015, p. 162). Driving forces promote change and includes “desire for more novel, effective, efficient or merely different activities” (Kearney-Nunnery, 2016, p.183). There are several driving forces indicating the need for change. Nurses often work longer than the 12 hour shift (Scott, Rogers, Hwang & Zhang, 2006). A greater number of nurses working 12 hour shifts report burnout and plans to leave their job compared to nurses working 8 hour shifts (Rollins, 2015) and often work 2 or more 12 hour shifts in a roll. Nurses, especially older nurses-who are more experienced, report physical and emotional exhaustion after working 12 hour shifts, “aches and pains, sleep deprivation” (Rollins, 2015, p. 162). Overtime and working consecutive 12 hour shifts further increases the rate of fatigue and burnout which decreases patient satisfaction with the quality of care received (Stimpfel, 2012). Nurses also report poor quality of care provided, decreased patient safety and more duties left undone when working 12 hours or more (Ball et. al., 2015). According to Stimpfel, Sloane and Aiken (2012) when a greater number of “nurses working more than thirteen hours on their last shift, higher percentages of patients reported that they would not recommend the hospital to friends and family” (p. 2506). Also studies have shown working more than 12 hours increases the risk for medication errors (Scott, 2006), nurse burnout, job dissatisfaction and intention to leave the job (Stimpfel et. al. 2012, page 2504).

How to Bring about Change

Nurses and hospital administrators must review both research and their hospital’s collected data from patient surveys, circumstances surrounding medication error reports and patient safety and nurse/employee incident reports and complaints related to quality of care filed. Executive administrators must be willing to review the financial impact of the driving forces verses the financial benefits from the restraining forces over the past several years and be open to seeing future trends. This is the unfreezing stage of the Lewin change model.

During the moving stage, “change objectives must be selected with consideration of activities for progressive change” (Kearney-Nunnery, 2016, p.185). “Organizations such as the Institute of Medicine and the American Nurses Association have made or supported recommendation to minimize fatigue and improve patient safety” (Rollins, 2015, p. 164). Nurses need food, hydration and proper rest in order to maintain optimal productivity (critical thinking, alertness, and providing quality nursing care and ensuring patient safety) on the job. As people advance in age, energy level and stamina decreases. Viable options for change include limiting overtime requirements, ensuring nurses receive uninterrupted breaks, making meal options available at all times, providing eight hour shifts as well as split shifts for nurses who want to work part-time (Geiger-Brown & Trinkoff, 2010).

Nurses can work within organizations, such as the American Nurses Association to lobby for legislation to promote change. Nurses and nursing supervisors can work with hospital administrators in implementing and maintaining the changes. Over a period of time, staff and administrators will adjust to, get in the habit of and maintain (refreezing) the change. This will lead to improvements in nurses’ job performance and patient satisfaction.

In summary, nursing has evolved over the years including the scheduling of work hours for the nurse. Twelve hour shifts has become popular with both nurses and hospital administrators but research has shown working 12 or more hours has adverse effects on the quality of nursing care provided, patient safety and patient satisfaction largely as well as nurse fatigue and burnout. The Lewin change model can be used to bring about changes to nurse schedules which positively impacts the nurse’s job performance and job satisfaction which increases patient safety and patient satisfaction.

Effect of the 12 hour shift on patient care and the nurse.docx

Specializes in Diabetes, Transplant, CCU, Neurology.

Working 8 hour shifts forces the hospital to staff 3-11 and 11-7, which I've always found difficult to fill those positions (3-11 moreso than 11-7). Of course, you could force people to rotate shifts, which makes daycare even more challenging. Also, studies have shown that almost twice the error rate for rotating shifts than for night shift (the 2nd highest). With this knowledge, I would think a hospital would open itself up to liability lawsuits simply by forcing rotating shift on to staff.

3 Votes
Specializes in Women's health & post-partum.

Retired nurse here. I never worked 12 hours (unless it was overtime). The last couple of years before retirement I would have welcomed 6 hours! 12 hours would have been wonderful when I had small children, but I had a very supportive husband whose job allowed him to be with the kids when I was at work and they weren't at school or at childcare. I realize everyone doesn't have that luxury.

4 Votes
Specializes in Frontline stuff.

Seriously?

Posting this "article," which is just a poorly-written BSN program paper (that leaves out tons of relevant information), is the last way to gain buy in for change in shift length.

2 Votes
Specializes in ICU + Infection Prevention.

8-hour shifts mean 50% more patient handoffs in 50% more nurse is providing care. These are huge sources of communication error and impair situational awareness of the patient.

1 Votes

It would appear that "most nurses" prefer 12 hour shifts and the topic should be left alone...

1 Votes

This topic should be separated by inpatient vs outpatient too.

2 Votes
Specializes in Dialysis.

I think it would be nice if acute and sub acute could offer a mix...not everyone wants 8s, not everyone wants 12s, and reasons vary...one area hospital does offer a mix, and they say it works out great for them

1 Votes
On 11/9/2019 at 11:43 AM, tachyallday said:

Seriously?

Posting this "article," which is just a poorly-written BSN program paper (that leaves out tons of relevant information), is the last way to gain buy in for change in shift length.

This poorly written BSN paper earned an A along with praise from the professor. The paper met the requirements for the assignment. It wasn't meant to be a doctorate thesis. If I was writing a doctorate thesis on this subject I would have included opinions on all sides of the issue of patient's safety and causes of nurse fatigue and dissatisfaction. I haven't advocated for changing the length of shifts. Just posted some of my writings because some people actually appreciate reading my papers. Not everyone has the same taste for writing styles or subjects. We just need to agree to disagree and respect each other. That makes us all different. You have gifts and talents in one area and I have them in another area. At the end of the day the question is "what difference did we make in someone's life?". Did we help each other in some way or did we do harm or hurt someone's feelings? We as nurses are trusted and are known to be there for our patients. Patients want their nurse to be caring and to be there for them. Anyway that is what I learned from school and from colleagues as well as patients. Just my two cents worth.

3 Votes
7 hours ago, Hoosier_RN said:

I think it would be nice if acute and sub acute could offer a mix...not everyone wants 8s, not everyone wants 12s, and reasons vary...one area hospital does offer a mix, and they say it works out great for them

Fantastic. Great comment ? Thanks so much for sharing. I hope everyone reads your comments. This is the best solution to the length of shift debate.

3 Votes
Specializes in Frontline stuff.
On 11/10/2019 at 9:27 PM, Linda Ransom said:

This poorly written BSN paper earned an A along with praise from the professor. The paper met the requirements for the assignment. It wasn't meant to be a doctorate thesis. If I was writing a doctorate thesis on this subject I would have included opinions on all sides of the issue of patient's safety and causes of nurse fatigue and dissatisfaction.

It is obvious your paper was for your BSN program. It is not difficult to get a good grade on those papers when your audience in your professor & fellow students, and we all know this. It indeed was well-written for it's purpose and for your audience. But this forum isn't that audience.

I haven't advocated for changing the length of shifts.

No? Then what exactly are you advocating for? You did title it "Affect of 12 hour shifts on patients: a Need for Change." and "How can I bring change to 12 hour shifts on patient care?"

What are the alternatives?

Quote

Just posted some of my writings because some people actually appreciate reading my papers. Not everyone has the same taste for writing styles or subjects. We just need to agree to disagree and respect each other.

Ok, that is wonderful that some people appreciate your papers, and it's ok that I didn't appreciate it, and I provided you some feedback in an open forum. I am sorry your feelings got hurt. If you are going to put your article out there, there are going to be people that don't like it. I never did not agree to disagree. Seems like you are the one not agreeing to disagree that I did not like your article because you go on to admonish me & virtue signal about feelings.

That makes us all different. You have gifts and talents in one area and I have them in another area. At the end of the day the question is "what difference did we make in someone's life?".

Why are you making this so personal?

Did we help each other in some way or did we do harm or hurt someone's feelings?

Sometimes when my feelings are hurt, I have to ask myself: am I being overly sensitive, or am I allowing my feelings to be hurt?

We as nurses are trusted and are known to be there for our patients. Patients want their nurse to be caring and to be there for them. Anyway that is what I learned from school and from colleagues as well as patients. Just my two cents worth.

Of course we are. I am not sure why you are bringing in this comment, other than to somehow make it really personal and insinuate that I don't care about feelings. I care about my patients & if you were my patient, I would give you the very best care. But you are not my patient. You are someone on a forum posting an article that I criticized.

I stand by, that: it is not well-written for this forum. We all know about change theory if we've been through a BSN program. You provide no compelling evidence whatsoever for improving outcomes, just purport that we should shorten shifts, and nurses and hospitals should look at the evidence. Ok, we all know all of us should be looking at evidence for everything little thing that affects our care of patients from the color of walls, to falls, to readmissions to hospital food etc. If you want buy-in vs burn-out from the average nurse on posted 'articles', make it succinct and convincing and show us some convincing proof instead of saying we need to look at evidence that is not even provided. Otherwise, you're just stirring the pot.

And for the record: I actually would be interested in looking at compelling evidence on changing 12 hours shifts (or how to make them better). Not only for effects on patient care, but for effects on nurses work-life balance. I spend at least one full day of the week dysfunctional from exhaustion. So right there, my four days off are really three.

5 Votes
Specializes in ICU, trauma, neuro.
On 11/11/2019 at 9:49 AM, tachyallday said:

I stand by, that: it is not well-written for this forum. We all know about change theory if we've been through a BSN program. You provide no compelling evidence whatsoever for improving outcomes, just purport that we should shorten shifts, and nurses and hospitals should look at the evidence. Ok, we all know all of us should be looking at evidence for everything little thing that affects our care of patients from the color of walls, to falls, to readmissions to hospital food etc. If you want buy-in vs burn-out from the average nurse on posted 'articles', make it succinct and convincing and show us some convincing proof instead of saying we need to look at evidence that is not even provided. Otherwise, you're just stirring the pot.

And for the record: I actually would be interested in looking at compelling evidence on changing 12 hours shifts (or how to make them better). Not only for effects on patient care, but for effects on nurses work-life balance. I spend at least one full day of the week dysfunctional from exhaustion. So right there, my four days off are really three.

The best way to make 12 hour shifts "better" would first and foremost be to adopt the California "ratio law" (which has teeth) and to adopt the California "lunch break"/break law which also has teeth. In almost ten years at my current job I've been able to take about 10 real lunch breaks, because we do not staff for breaks even though we must clock out (and not get paid) for a 30 minute lunch. Start with some basics like safe staffing and actual breaks written into law with actual enforcement provisions.

4 Votes
Specializes in Frontline stuff.
5 hours ago, myoglobin said:

The best way to make 12 hour shifts "better" would first and foremost be to adopt the California "ratio law" (which has teeth) and to adopt the California "lunch break"/break law which also has teeth. In almost ten years at my current job I've been able to take about 10 real lunch breaks, because we do not staff for breaks even though we must clock out (and not get paid) for a 30 minute lunch. Start with some basics like safe staffing and actual breaks written into law with actual enforcement provisions.

Your employer is breaking the law if they are forcing you to clock out, but not insuring that you are getting 30 uninterrupted minutes, and not paying you if you do not get them. If my break gets interrupted by work, I am not counting it as a break. An anonymous call to your state's labor board could help out with that.

3 Votes