Emmanuel Talia, Griffiths Peter, Lamas-Fernandez Carlos, Ejebu Ourega-Zoé, Dall'Ora Chiara
School of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration, Wessex, UK.
J Clin Nurs. 2024 Mar;33(3):998-1011. doi: 10.1111/jocn.16974. Epub 2023 Dec 27.
To gain a deeper understanding of what is important to nurses when thinking about shift patterns and the organisation of working time.
A cross-sectional survey of nursing staff working across the UK and Ireland collected quantitative and qualitative responses.
We recruited from two National Health Service Trusts and through an open call via trade union membership, online/print nursing profession magazines and social media. Worked versus preferred shift length/pattern, satisfaction and choice over shift patterns and nurses' views on aspects related to work and life (when working short, long, rotating shifts) were analysed with comparisons of proportions of agreement and crosstabulation. Qualitative responses on important factors related to shift preferences were analysed with inductive thematic analysis.
Eight hundred and seventy-three survey responses were collected. When nurses worked long shifts and rotating shifts, lower proportions reported being satisfied with their shifts and working their preferred shift length and pattern. Limited advantages were realised when comparing different shift types; however, respondents more frequently associated 'low travel costs' and 'better ability to do paid overtime' with long shifts and 'healthy diet/exercise' with short shifts; aspects related to rotating shifts often had the lowest proportions of agreement. In the qualitative analysis, three themes were developed: 'When I want to work', 'Impacts to my life outside work' and 'Improving my work environment'. Reasons for nurses' shift preferences were frequently related to nurses' priorities outside of work, highlighting the importance of organising schedules that support a good work-life balance.
General scheduling practices like adhering to existing shift work guidelines, using consistent and predictable shift patterns and facilitating flexibility over working time were identified by nurses as enablers for their preferences and priorities. These practices warrant meaningful consideration when establishing safe and efficient nurse rosters.
This survey was developed and tested with a diverse group of stakeholders, including nursing staff, patients, union leads and ward managers.
The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies (STROBE) checklist for cross-sectional studies was used to guide reporting.
更深入地了解护士在考虑轮班模式和工作时间安排时认为重要的因素。
对英国和爱尔兰的护理人员进行横断面调查,收集定量和定性的回答。
我们从两个国民健康服务信托机构招募,并通过工会会员、在线/印刷护理专业杂志和社交媒体的公开招募。分析实际工作与偏好的轮班长度/模式、对轮班模式的满意度和选择,以及护士对与工作和生活相关方面(当工作短班、长班、轮班时)的看法,比较同意比例并进行交叉制表分析。对与轮班偏好相关的重要因素的定性回答采用归纳主题分析。
共收集到873份调查问卷回复。当护士上长班和轮班时,报告对轮班满意以及按自己偏好的轮班长度和模式工作的比例较低。比较不同轮班类型时发现的优势有限;然而,受访者更常将“低交通成本”和“更好的加班挣钱能力”与长班联系起来,将“健康饮食/锻炼”与短班联系起来;与轮班相关的方面通常同意比例最低。在定性分析中,形成了三个主题:“我想工作的时间”、“对我工作之外生活的影响”和“改善我的工作环境”。护士轮班偏好的原因通常与工作之外的优先事项相关,突出了安排支持良好工作与生活平衡的时间表的重要性。
护士认为,遵循现有轮班工作指南、采用一致且可预测的轮班模式以及在工作时间上提供灵活性等一般排班做法有助于满足他们的偏好和优先事项。在制定安全高效的护士排班表时,这些做法值得认真考虑。
本调查是与包括护理人员、患者、工会领导和病房经理在内的不同利益相关者共同制定和测试的。
采用横断面研究的加强观察性研究报告(STROBE)清单来指导报告。