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Understanding the Experiences of Nurses' Work: Development and Psychometric Evaluation of an End of Shift Survey.

Authors :
Parr, Jenny M.
Slark, Julia
Lawless, Jane
Teo, Stephen T. T.
Source :
Journal of Clinical Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.). Oct2024, p1. 12p. 1 Illustration.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

ABSTRACT Aim Design Methods Results Conclusion Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care Reporting Method Patient or Public Contribution To explore and validate an end of shift survey with a low response burden, practical application and generated evidence of related associations between workload, quality of work and patient care, missed care and job satisfaction.A retrospective cross‐sectional survey of the experiences of nursing staff.Data were collected from 265 nurses who responded to a questionnaire at the end of their shift in 2022. Exploratory factor analysis was undertaken using IBM SPSS v.27 and confirmatory factor analysis was undertaken using IBM AMOS v27. Hypotheses testing was undertaken using IBM SPSS v.27 using multiple regression analyses.All of the hypotheses were supported. There was a negative association between workload and quality of work and job satisfaction. Quality of work was negatively associated with workload and missed care and positively associated with job satisfaction. The association between missed care and job satisfaction was negative.The EOSS is a valid and reliable tool with a low response burden. The tool supports previous research which demonstrated there is a negative relationship between level of workload and shift type with satisfaction, quality of work and potentially nurse retention.In the context of a global nursing shortage nursing leaders must ensure that care we provide is of the highest quality. We must take every action to address high workload to reduce the risk that fundamental care is not sacrificed, job satisfaction is improved and nurses remain in the profession. The EOSS gives nurse leaders a reliable, practical, consistent, applied tool that will better enable associations to be observed between resource configuration, workload and critical impacts on nursing and patient care.We have adhered to the relevant EQUATOR guidelines using the STROBE reporting method.No Patient or Public Contribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09621067
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180101956
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.17437