4.6 Review

Twenty-four/seven: a mixed-method systematic review of the off-shift literature

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
Volume 68, Issue 7, Pages 1454-1468

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2012.05976.x

Keywords

after hours; fatigue; mixed-method systematic review; mortality; nursing; patient outcomes; patient safety

Categories

Funding

  1. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation [053420]
  2. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [R36HS018216]
  3. Veterans' Affairs [IIR 09-362]
  4. Sigma Theta Tau Alpha Zeta Chapter
  5. National Institute of Nursing Research [T32-NR-007104]

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de cordova p.b., phibbs c. s., bartel a.p. & stone p.w. (2012) Twenty-four/seven: a mixed-method systematic review of the off-shift literature. Journal of Advanced Nursing68(7), 14541468. Abstract Aim. This article is a report of a review that aimed to synthesize qualitative and quantitative evidence of off-shifts (nights, weekends and/or holidays) on quality and employee outcomes in hospitals. Background. Healthcare workers provide 24-hour-a-day, 7-day-a-week service. Quality and employee outcomes may differ on off-shifts as compared to regular hours. Data sources. Searches for studies occurred between the years 19852011 using computerized databases including Business Source Complete, EconLit, ProQuest, PubMed and MEDLINE. Review design and methods. Design was a mixed-method systematic review with quantitative and qualitative studies. To be included, studies met the following criteria: (1) the independent variable was an off-shift; (2) the article was a research study and peer-reviewed; (3) the article could be obtained in English; and (4) the article pertained to health care. Studies were not excluded on design. Results. Sixty studies were included. There were 37 quality outcome, 19 employee outcome and four qualitative studies. In the quality outcome studies, researchers often used quantitative, longitudinal study designs with large sample sizes. Researchers found important differences between patients admitted on weekends and mortality. Important differences were also found between nighttime birth and mortality and rotating night work and fatigue, stress and low mental well-being. Most studies (9 of 12) did not find an important association between patients admitted at night and mortality. Conclusion. Patient outcomes on weekends and employee outcomes at night are worse than during the day. It is important to further investigate why care on off-shifts differs from weekly day shifts.

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