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Are long nursing shifts on hospital wards associated with sickness absence? A longitudinal retrospective observational study

Are long nursing shifts on hospital wards associated with sickness absence? A longitudinal retrospective observational study
Are long nursing shifts on hospital wards associated with sickness absence? A longitudinal retrospective observational study
Objective

To investigate whether working 12 hr shifts is associated with increased sickness absence among registered nurses and health care assistants.

Background

Previous studies reported negative impacts on nurses’ 12 hr shifts; however, these studies used cross‐sectional techniques and subjective nurse‐reported data.

Methods

A retrospective longitudinal study using routinely collected data across 32 general inpatient wards at an acute hospital in England. We used generalized linear mixed models to explore the association between shift patterns and the subsequent occurrence of short (<7 days) or long‐term (≥7 days) sickness absence.

Results

We analysed 601,282 shifts and 8,090 distinct episodes of sickness absence. When more than 75% of shifts worked in the past 7 days were 12 hr in length, the odds of both a short‐term (adjusted odds ratio = 1.28; 95% confidence index: 1.18–1.39) and long‐term sickness episode (adjusted odds ratio = 1.22; 95% confidence index: 1.08–1.37) were increased compared with working none.

Conclusion

Working long shifts on hospital wards is associated with a higher risk of sickness absence for registered nurses and health care assistants.

Implications for Nursing Management

The higher sickness absence rates associated with long shifts could result in additional costs or loss of productivity for hospitals. The routine implementation of long shifts should be avoided.

0966-0429
19-26
Dall'ora, Chiara
4501b172-005c-4fad-86da-2d63978ffdfd
Ball, Jane
85ac7d7a-b21e-42fd-858b-78d263c559c1
Redfern, Oliver
fbfa43f6-3677-4bbf-a261-09f8baf96e27
Recio-Saucedo, Alejandra
d05c4e43-3399-466d-99e0-01403a04b467
Maruotti, Antonello
7096256c-fa1b-4cc1-9ca4-1a60cc3ee12e
Meredith, Paul
d0a0e287-ad7f-41cb-9347-94d7a0e957c1
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Dall'ora, Chiara
4501b172-005c-4fad-86da-2d63978ffdfd
Ball, Jane
85ac7d7a-b21e-42fd-858b-78d263c559c1
Redfern, Oliver
fbfa43f6-3677-4bbf-a261-09f8baf96e27
Recio-Saucedo, Alejandra
d05c4e43-3399-466d-99e0-01403a04b467
Maruotti, Antonello
7096256c-fa1b-4cc1-9ca4-1a60cc3ee12e
Meredith, Paul
d0a0e287-ad7f-41cb-9347-94d7a0e957c1
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b

Dall'ora, Chiara, Ball, Jane, Redfern, Oliver, Recio-Saucedo, Alejandra, Maruotti, Antonello, Meredith, Paul and Griffiths, Peter (2019) Are long nursing shifts on hospital wards associated with sickness absence? A longitudinal retrospective observational study. Journal of Nursing Management, 27 (1), 19-26. (doi:10.1111/jonm.12643).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective

To investigate whether working 12 hr shifts is associated with increased sickness absence among registered nurses and health care assistants.

Background

Previous studies reported negative impacts on nurses’ 12 hr shifts; however, these studies used cross‐sectional techniques and subjective nurse‐reported data.

Methods

A retrospective longitudinal study using routinely collected data across 32 general inpatient wards at an acute hospital in England. We used generalized linear mixed models to explore the association between shift patterns and the subsequent occurrence of short (<7 days) or long‐term (≥7 days) sickness absence.

Results

We analysed 601,282 shifts and 8,090 distinct episodes of sickness absence. When more than 75% of shifts worked in the past 7 days were 12 hr in length, the odds of both a short‐term (adjusted odds ratio = 1.28; 95% confidence index: 1.18–1.39) and long‐term sickness episode (adjusted odds ratio = 1.22; 95% confidence index: 1.08–1.37) were increased compared with working none.

Conclusion

Working long shifts on hospital wards is associated with a higher risk of sickness absence for registered nurses and health care assistants.

Implications for Nursing Management

The higher sickness absence rates associated with long shifts could result in additional costs or loss of productivity for hospitals. The routine implementation of long shifts should be avoided.

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Are long nursing shifts on hospital wards associated with sickness absence? A longitudinal retrospective observational study - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 March 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 July 2018
Published date: January 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 419449
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/419449
ISSN: 0966-0429
PURE UUID: 5b375b5d-e338-44f0-accc-0fa2bb3f2c9b
ORCID for Chiara Dall'ora: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6858-3535
ORCID for Jane Ball: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8655-2994
ORCID for Alejandra Recio-Saucedo: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2823-4573
ORCID for Peter Griffiths: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2439-2857

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 12 Apr 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 06:27

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Contributors

Author: Chiara Dall'ora ORCID iD
Author: Jane Ball ORCID iD
Author: Oliver Redfern
Author: Antonello Maruotti
Author: Paul Meredith
Author: Peter Griffiths ORCID iD

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