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Nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: A systematic scoping review and discussion

BACKGROUND: The importance of nurse staffing levels in acute hospital wards is widely recognised but evidence for tools to determine staffing requirements although extensive, has been reported to be weak. Building on a review of reviews undertaken in 2014, we set out to give an overview of the major...

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Autores principales: Griffiths, Peter, Saville, Christina, Ball, Jane, Jones, Jeremy, Pattison, Natalie, Monks, Thomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pergamon Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7086229/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31884330
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2019.103487
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author Griffiths, Peter
Saville, Christina
Ball, Jane
Jones, Jeremy
Pattison, Natalie
Monks, Thomas
author_facet Griffiths, Peter
Saville, Christina
Ball, Jane
Jones, Jeremy
Pattison, Natalie
Monks, Thomas
author_sort Griffiths, Peter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The importance of nurse staffing levels in acute hospital wards is widely recognised but evidence for tools to determine staffing requirements although extensive, has been reported to be weak. Building on a review of reviews undertaken in 2014, we set out to give an overview of the major approaches to assessing nurse staffing requirements and identify recent evidence in order to address unanswered questions including the accuracy and effectiveness of tools. METHODS: We undertook a systematic scoping review. Searches of Medline, the Cochrane Library and CINAHL were used to identify recent primary research, which was reviewed in the context of conclusions from existing reviews. RESULTS: The published literature is extensive and describes a variety of uses for tools including establishment setting, daily deployment and retrospective review. There are a variety of approaches including professional judgement, simple volume-based methods (such as patient-to-nurse ratios), patient prototype/classification and timed-task approaches. Tools generally attempt to match staffing to a mean average demand or time requirement despite evidence of skewed demand distributions. The largest group of recent studies reported the evaluation of (mainly new) tools and systems, but provides little evidence of impacts on patient care and none on costs. Benefits of staffing levels set using the tools appear to be linked to increased staffing with no evidence of tools providing a more efficient or effective use of a given staff resource. Although there is evidence that staffing assessments made using tools may correlate with other assessments, different systems lead to dramatically different estimates of staffing requirements. While it is evident that there are many sources of variation in demand, the extent to which systems can deliver staffing levels to meet such demand is unclear. The assumption that staffing to meet average need is the optimal response to varying demand is untested and may be incorrect. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the importance of the question and the large volume of publication evidence about nurse staffing methods remains highly limited. There is no evidence to support the choice of any particular tool. Future research should focus on learning more about the use of existing tools rather than simply developing new ones. Priority research questions include how best to use tools to identify the required staffing level to meet varying patient need and the costs and consequences of using tools. TWEETABLE ABSTRACT: Decades of research on tools to determine nurse staffing requirements is largely uninformative. Little is known about the costs or consequences of widely used tools.
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spelling pubmed-70862292020-03-25 Nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: A systematic scoping review and discussion Griffiths, Peter Saville, Christina Ball, Jane Jones, Jeremy Pattison, Natalie Monks, Thomas Int J Nurs Stud Article BACKGROUND: The importance of nurse staffing levels in acute hospital wards is widely recognised but evidence for tools to determine staffing requirements although extensive, has been reported to be weak. Building on a review of reviews undertaken in 2014, we set out to give an overview of the major approaches to assessing nurse staffing requirements and identify recent evidence in order to address unanswered questions including the accuracy and effectiveness of tools. METHODS: We undertook a systematic scoping review. Searches of Medline, the Cochrane Library and CINAHL were used to identify recent primary research, which was reviewed in the context of conclusions from existing reviews. RESULTS: The published literature is extensive and describes a variety of uses for tools including establishment setting, daily deployment and retrospective review. There are a variety of approaches including professional judgement, simple volume-based methods (such as patient-to-nurse ratios), patient prototype/classification and timed-task approaches. Tools generally attempt to match staffing to a mean average demand or time requirement despite evidence of skewed demand distributions. The largest group of recent studies reported the evaluation of (mainly new) tools and systems, but provides little evidence of impacts on patient care and none on costs. Benefits of staffing levels set using the tools appear to be linked to increased staffing with no evidence of tools providing a more efficient or effective use of a given staff resource. Although there is evidence that staffing assessments made using tools may correlate with other assessments, different systems lead to dramatically different estimates of staffing requirements. While it is evident that there are many sources of variation in demand, the extent to which systems can deliver staffing levels to meet such demand is unclear. The assumption that staffing to meet average need is the optimal response to varying demand is untested and may be incorrect. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the importance of the question and the large volume of publication evidence about nurse staffing methods remains highly limited. There is no evidence to support the choice of any particular tool. Future research should focus on learning more about the use of existing tools rather than simply developing new ones. Priority research questions include how best to use tools to identify the required staffing level to meet varying patient need and the costs and consequences of using tools. TWEETABLE ABSTRACT: Decades of research on tools to determine nurse staffing requirements is largely uninformative. Little is known about the costs or consequences of widely used tools. Pergamon Press 2020-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7086229/ /pubmed/31884330 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2019.103487 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Griffiths, Peter
Saville, Christina
Ball, Jane
Jones, Jeremy
Pattison, Natalie
Monks, Thomas
Nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: A systematic scoping review and discussion
title Nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: A systematic scoping review and discussion
title_full Nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: A systematic scoping review and discussion
title_fullStr Nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: A systematic scoping review and discussion
title_full_unstemmed Nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: A systematic scoping review and discussion
title_short Nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: A systematic scoping review and discussion
title_sort nursing workload, nurse staffing methodologies and tools: a systematic scoping review and discussion
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7086229/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31884330
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2019.103487
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