Published Feb 23, 2011
TheMrsRN
33 Posts
Does anyone know of any journal articles or research studies on nursing fatigue? Thanks!
ETA: This isn't homework. I am not a student. I am looking for credible studies that I can use to help implement evidence based staffing protocols for my facility.
Also, if you don't know of any, but work at a facility that has staffing policies to prevent nursing fatigue, what are they and how are they working at your hospital?
roser13, ASN, RN
6,504 Posts
Have you tried researching the topic for yourself? Because this website is not really a "do your homework for you" forum.
No longer being a student I don't have access to nursing journal databases. Google searches don't produce credible sources. I am not doing homework. I am looking for credible studies that I can use to help implement evidence based staffing protocols for my facility.
ErinS, BSN, RN
347 Posts
Sign up for medscape. They have a lot of research. Also your work should allow you access to journals.
Thanks for the rec for medscape. I found 2 interesting articles! We only have access to one journal at my hospital, and it isn't nursing specific. I have access to a hospital library at a sister facility, but it is a couple of hours away from where I live.
dragn2623
78 Posts
Have you tried google scholar?? Sometimes you can get some decent hits....not sure if the below would help, but this is what I found doing a five minute search using google scholar with the search term "fatigue in registered nurses"... sometimes you can get access to free articles....
http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/23/4/202.full
http://etd.lib.fsu.edu/theses_1/submitted/etd-04062005-150536/unrestricted/AbendrothMThesis.pdf
http://www.aacn.org/WD/CETests/Media/A0615013.pdf
http://medqi.bsd.uchicago.edu/documents/RNroleindetectingerrorQSHC4_08.pdf
Riseupandnurse
658 Posts
The ANA and nursing management on the national level are really starting to look at the research on this in the context of 12 hour shifts. This follows the Institute of Medicine's success in getting the hours residents work consecutively reduced because of the clear evidence of the increase in danger to patients.
The Institute has recommended the same reduction in hours for nurses. You should be able to find a lot of recent information on this subject.
KeyMaster
71 Posts
I really don't understand how hospitals expect us to follow evidenced based practices without access to the research and recommendations! I am extremely fortunate to have access to an awesome online database at my facility, but we are a teaching hospital. Are there any nursing schools that do clinicals at your facility? Maybe a quid pro quo for allowing students into the hospital - they could allow access to their database? Good luck!
pajoopie1
43 Posts
@TheMrsRN
Ask the librarian at the sister hospital if you can access the electronic databases from your hospital campus. George Pink and Cheryl Jones have good work on this but there is a lot out there. Ask the librarian how to sign in to google scholar and you can use that.
Alternatively, try pubmed or nih.gov or look at nursing specific sites. I'm sure the ANA has stuff on staffing.
EmergencyNrse
632 Posts
I have no credible research. The only source here is my own observation.
Know that admin authorizes only so many FTE's. When the census spikes we are run ragged because there is nothing to draw from. No stop-gap measure in place to augment a crisis level influx of patients.
Oh, there IS fatigue... and then the call-in's start. (3 to 4 at a time)
There is no budget or plan for "surge" staffing (a pro-active approach) only skeleton resources and re-active measures only after the flag goes up. Every time we try to be proactive the bean-counters shoot us down. No money for it.
There is no relief and those of us that actually show up and we get beat to hell.
Horrible way to staff any department.
eriksoln, BSN, RN
2,636 Posts
Does anyone know of any journal articles or research studies on nursing fatigue? Thanks!ETA: This isn't homework. I am not a student. I am looking for credible studies that I can use to help implement evidence based staffing protocols for my facility. Also, if you don't know of any, but work at a facility that has staffing policies to prevent nursing fatigue, what are they and how are they working at your hospital?
My hospital's policy to prevent fatigue is to let you know if your work slips, you are gone, regardless of the hours you worked or the staffing ratios at the time. Works well for them in these times where finding work is difficult. Wonder if they'll update things once nursing jobs are not so scarce.
Mulan
2,228 Posts
I work, I'm exhausted.
How's that?