Extended work shifts of twelve hours or longer are common and popular among hospital staff nurses, but a study reports that nurses working longer shifts were more likely to experience burnout, job dissatisfaction, and patients were more dissatisfied with their care.
In the first study to examine the relationship between nurse shift length and patients' assessment of care, researchers from the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing report that nurses working shifts of ten hours or longer were up to two and a half times more likely than nurses working shorter shifts to experience burnout and job dissatisfaction. Furthermore, seven out of ten patient outcomes were significantly and adversely affected by the longest shifts.
"Traditional eight-hour shifts for hospital nurses are becoming a thing of the past. Bedside nurses increasingly work twelve-hour shifts. This schedule gives nurses a three-day work week, potentially providing better work-life balance and flexibility," said Amy Witkoski Stimpfel, PhD, RN, a post-doctoral fellow at the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research at Penn Nursing. "When long shifts are combined with overtime, shifts that rotate between day and night duty, and consecutive shifts, nurses are at risk for fatigue and burnout, which may compromise patient care."
This study took place in California, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Florida, which represents approximately 25 percent of the United States population and 20 percent of annual US hospitalizations. Nearly 23,000 registered nurses took part in the study over a three-year period.
Sixty-five percent of nurses worked shifts of 12-13 hours, the percentages of nurses reporting burnout and intention to leave their job increased incrementally as shift length increased, wrote Dr. Witkoski Stimpfel and Penn Nursing co-authors Linda Aiken, PhD, RN, FAAN and Douglas Sloane, PhD, in the November issue of the prestigious policy journal Health Affairs.
In hospitals which had higher proportions of nurses working longer shifts, higher percentages of patients reported that nurses sometimes or never communicated well, pain was sometimes or never well controlled, and they sometimes or never received help as soon as they wanted.
Dr. Witkoski Stimpfel and co-authors recommend restricting the number of consecutive hours worked, that state boards of nursing consider whether restrictions on nurse shift length and voluntary overtime are advisable, and nurse management should monitor nurses' hours worked, including second jobs.
"Nursing leadership should also encourage a workplace culture that respects nurses' days off and vacation time, promotes nurse's prompt departure at the end of a scheduled shift, and allows nurses to refuse to work overtime without retribution," noted Dr. Witkoski Stimpfel. "These types of policies that facilitate manageable work hours can contribute to the development of a healthier nursing workforce, prepared to manage the complex care needs of patients and their families."
Your turn to weigh in on this important topic. Share your thoughts in the comments section below.
I am a senior aged psychiatric/addictions RN who opts for 12 hour shifts because that schedule allows me plenty of quality time with my patients while simultaneously giving me a life away from work. While I am tired at the end of my shift, my level of fatigue is no higher than at the end of eight hours. If I was forced to work only eight-hour shifts I would have to go part-time or just retire completely. There should be much more flexibility in scheduling, with self-scheduling the ideal. There should also be a choice in shift length, with both 8 hour and12 hour schedules available. Mandatory overtime is a blight (all states should make laws against it for RNs). Llmiting the number of voluntary overtime hours a nurse can work in a week and/or consecutively is a good idea.
I agree 100%, but try to get through to these new graduates who want everything, but don’t care about effects on the patient. I tried to talk to my niece about this exact issue and she defriended me on Facebook because she did not want to hear reality. I am a nurse for 40 years and have an MSN. I even cited research, but no go. I am definitely going to pass this study on. Hopefully, someone will benefit from it. Thank you.
I have had to work 12 hour shifts for nearly 20
20 years and I will agree that they do increase
The risk for burn out and will increase the
Frequency of early retirement or other changes
In career. We should have a choice and more
Flexibility in scheduling. As one gets older
It is harder and harder to work several shifts
In a row, and this is required when one has
To work every other weekend. I changed to
Prn to avoid these long stretches. I have
Chronic severe arthritis and simply can’t do
These shifts in succession anymore. It is All
About the money