Job Satisfaction And Nurses Research Proposal

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¶ … PICO/PIO development Key term

Child

Salbutamol

Alternatives

Paediatric, pediatric, infant

Albuterol, ventolin

How would you describe your Participant, Patient, or Population group?

Female hospital worker age 20 to 45

What characteristics of your Patient/s are important? Age, gender, condition, etc. can all be significant.

What Intervention are you interested in?

Intervention

8-hour shift

Work shift 8 hours long

Defining the Intervention is often the central part of PICO.

What alternative or different option do you want to Compare your intervention to?

Comparison

12-hour shift

Work shift 12 hours long

You might want to Compare the chosen intervention to usual care, to another intervention or to no intervention.

What measurable Outcome/s are you interested in?

Outcomes

burnout

Nurse fatigue

Outcome is the final aspect of PICO. Some examples include: symptoms of asthma, accuracy of diagnosis or mortality.

2. Reformatted (PICO) Clinical Question

In healthcare providers working in a hospital (nurses) (P component) how does an 8-hour shift (I component) compared with a 12-hour shift (C component) effect burnout (O component).

3. Systematic Search Strategy for literature to support proposal

Fill out the systematic search strategy for your question -- add or delete lines as necessary.

P

Key terms and MESH terms: (note which terms were also MESH terms in your search)

1

Nurses

2

Healthcare providers

3

Hospital employees

4

RNs

5

_1_ OR__2_OR__3_OR__4_... (combine alternate terms for same topic) Nurses and Healthcare providers

6

8-hour work shift

7

8-hour shift

8

Average working hours

9

8 hours

10

9-5 shift

11

_6_ OR_7__OR_8__OR_9__... (combine alternate terms for same topic) 8 hours or average hours

12

12-hour shift

13

12-hour work shift

14

Overtime shift

15

Extended work shift

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_12_ OR_13__OR_14__OR__15_... (combine alternate terms for same topic) 12-hour overtime

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Burnout

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Nurse fatigue

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Nurse overwork

20

Nurse stress

...

(combine alternate terms for same topic) burnout fatigue
22

_5___AND__11__AND__16__AND__21 12-hour shift burnout nurse

O

C

I

1

RESEARCH PROPOSAL (Parts B. and C)

Part B: Literature Summary (10 marks, 500 words)

According to Dall'Ora, Griffiths, Ball, Simon and Aiken (2015), the 12-hour work shift for nurses is associated with higher levels of stress, burnout, and presents numerous safety risks for both patients and nurses and is thus not a good work shift for nurses. The researchers conducted a cross-sectional survey of more than 30,000 nurses in more than 450 hospitals throughout Europe. The study is helpful in highlighting negative outcomes associated with the 12-hour shift.

The study by Dall'Ora, Griffiths and Ball (2015) shows that in Europe the 12-hour work shift is also associated with decreases in job satisfaction levels and increases in nurse burnout. Their study indicates that the extended work shift can lead to higher turnover rates precisely because nurses get burned out. This study performs a systematic review of literature available on this subject. The study is helpful in showing that the 12-hour shift and its correlation with burnout among nurses is not an isolated incident but a phenomenon that occurs all over Europe.

Likewise, the study by Stimpfel, Sloane, and Aiken (2012) shows that the longer nurses work on a shift the more likely they are to experience burnout and the more likely patients are to feel dissatisfied with the quality of care they are receiving. This study utilizes survey data and analyses to assess outcomes associated with the 12-hour week. The study is helpful in showing that the longer nurses work a shift, the more likely they are to be fatigued.

Classen, Davis and Sutter (2016) compare outcomes of the 8-hour work shift vs. the 12-hour work shift for nurses. They perform a literature review to examine the effects of each on patient care and nurse fatigue. They find that further research is still needed in order to fully understand the relationship between the 12-hour shift and burnout and the 8-hour shift and burnout, though the findings that they uncover indicate that the 12-hour shift is more likely to result in burnout for nurses. The study is significant because it compares the two shifts that this study aims to compare and it provides some support for this study's work.

Han, Trinkhoff, and Geiger-Brown (2014) assess the variables associated with burnout and recovery for nurses who work 12-hour shifts. The purpose of their research is to identify factors that lead to fatigue and burnout and factors…

Sources Used in Documents:

References

Classen, J., Davis, S., Sutter, E. (2016). The impact of an 8-hour versus 12-hour shift for registered nurses: An integrative review. Cedarville University Symposium. Retrieved from http://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/research_scholarship_symposium/2016/poster_presentations/12/

Dall'Ora, C., Griffiths, P., Ball, J. (2016). 12-hour shifts: burnout or job satisfaction? Nursing Times, 112(12/13): 1-2.

Dall'Ora, C., Griffiths, P., Ball, J., Simon, M., Aiken, L. (2015). Association of 12 h shifts and nurses' job satisfaction, burnout and intention to leave: findings from a cross-sectional study of 12 European countries. BMJ Open, 5(9): e008331 doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008331.

Han, K., Trinkoff, A., Geiger-Brown, J. (2014). Factors associated with work-related fatigue and recovery in hospital nurses working 12-hour shifts. Workplace Health & Safety, 62(10): 409-414.


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