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Night work for hospital nurses and sickness absence: a retrospective study using electronic rostering systems

Night work for hospital nurses and sickness absence: a retrospective study using electronic rostering systems
Night work for hospital nurses and sickness absence: a retrospective study using electronic rostering systems
There is conflicting evidence on the effect of night work on sickness absence. Most previous studies used self-reporting to identify shift patterns and measure levels of sickness absence. In contrast, this study used objective data from electronic rosters to explore the association of nurses’ patterns of night work and sickness absence. This was a retrospective longitudinal study of nurse roster data from 32 general medical and surgical wards in a large acute hospital in England. We used data from 3 years and included both registered nurses and unregistered nursing assistants. We used generalized linear-mixed models to explore the association between night work and the subsequent occurrence of sickness absence. Of 601,282 shifts worked by 1944 nursing staff, 38,051 shifts were lost due to sickness absence. After controlling for potential confounders including proportion of long (≥12 h) shifts worked, proportion of overtime shifts, proportion of shifts worked in the past 7 days, and staff grade, we found that staff working more than 75% of their shifts in the past 7 days as night shifts were more likely to experience sickness absence (aOR = 1.12; 95% CI: 1.03–1.21), compared to staff working on day only schedules. Sub-group analysis found that an association between a high proportion of night shifts worked and long-term sickness (aOR = 1.31; 95% CI: 1.15–1.50), but not short-term sickness. Working high proportions of night shifts, likely representing permanent night work schedules, is associated with a higher risk of long-term sickness absence for nurses working in inpatient adult wards in acute hospitals. The higher sickness absence rates associated with permanent night shifts could result in additional costs or loss of productivity for hospitals. This study challenges the assumption that permanent night schedules maximize circadian adjustment and, therefore, reduce health problems.
Shift work, night work, nursing, permanent night work, sickness absence
0742-0528
1357-1364
Dall'ora, Chiara
4501b172-005c-4fad-86da-2d63978ffdfd
Ball, Jane
85ac7d7a-b21e-42fd-858b-78d263c559c1
Redfern, Oliver C.
82443bac-293a-466c-bcef-389088aeb7bd
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Dall'ora, Chiara
4501b172-005c-4fad-86da-2d63978ffdfd
Ball, Jane
85ac7d7a-b21e-42fd-858b-78d263c559c1
Redfern, Oliver C.
82443bac-293a-466c-bcef-389088aeb7bd
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b

Dall'ora, Chiara, Ball, Jane, Redfern, Oliver C. and Griffiths, Peter (2020) Night work for hospital nurses and sickness absence: a retrospective study using electronic rostering systems. Chronobiology International, 37 (9-10), 1357-1364. (doi:10.1080/07420528.2020.1806290).

Record type: Article

Abstract

There is conflicting evidence on the effect of night work on sickness absence. Most previous studies used self-reporting to identify shift patterns and measure levels of sickness absence. In contrast, this study used objective data from electronic rosters to explore the association of nurses’ patterns of night work and sickness absence. This was a retrospective longitudinal study of nurse roster data from 32 general medical and surgical wards in a large acute hospital in England. We used data from 3 years and included both registered nurses and unregistered nursing assistants. We used generalized linear-mixed models to explore the association between night work and the subsequent occurrence of sickness absence. Of 601,282 shifts worked by 1944 nursing staff, 38,051 shifts were lost due to sickness absence. After controlling for potential confounders including proportion of long (≥12 h) shifts worked, proportion of overtime shifts, proportion of shifts worked in the past 7 days, and staff grade, we found that staff working more than 75% of their shifts in the past 7 days as night shifts were more likely to experience sickness absence (aOR = 1.12; 95% CI: 1.03–1.21), compared to staff working on day only schedules. Sub-group analysis found that an association between a high proportion of night shifts worked and long-term sickness (aOR = 1.31; 95% CI: 1.15–1.50), but not short-term sickness. Working high proportions of night shifts, likely representing permanent night work schedules, is associated with a higher risk of long-term sickness absence for nurses working in inpatient adult wards in acute hospitals. The higher sickness absence rates associated with permanent night shifts could result in additional costs or loss of productivity for hospitals. This study challenges the assumption that permanent night schedules maximize circadian adjustment and, therefore, reduce health problems.

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Night Work for Hospital Nurses and Sickness Absence a retrospective study using electronic rostering systems - Author's Original
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Accepted/In Press date: 31 July 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 August 2020
Published date: 2 October 2020
Additional Information: Funding Information: This report presents independent research funded by the UK’s National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research Programme (award number HS&DR 13/114/17); and NIHR Applied Research Collaboration Wessex. The views and opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the NHS, the NIHR, NETSCC, the HS&DR programme or the Department of Health and Social Care. Publisher Copyright: © 2020 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
Keywords: Shift work, night work, nursing, permanent night work, sickness absence

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 443546
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/443546
ISSN: 0742-0528
PURE UUID: d69c8b0e-3342-4728-b25c-bca7e144880c
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 Peter Griffiths: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2439-2857

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Date deposited: 28 Aug 2020 16:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:50

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Contributors

Author: Chiara Dall'ora ORCID iD
Author: Jane Ball ORCID iD
Author: Oliver C. Redfern
Author: Peter Griffiths ORCID iD

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