4.6 Article

Intrahospital transfers and the impact on nursing workload

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
Volume 26, Issue 23-24, Pages 4822-4829

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.13838

Keywords

intrahospital transfer; nurse workload; nursing activities; observational-timing study; secondary analysis; transfer

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Aims and objectivesTo determine the rate of patient moves and the impact on nurses' time. BackgroundBed shortages and strategies designed to increase patient flow have led to a global increase in patient transfers between wards. The impact of transferring patients between wards and between beds within a ward on nurses' workload has not previously been measured. DesignA two-stage sequential study. Retrospective analysis of hospital data and a prospective observational-timing study. MethodsSecondary analysis of an administrative data set to inform the rate of ward and bed transfers (n=34,715) was undertaken followed by an observational-timing study of nurses' activities associated with patient transfers (n=75). ResultsOver 10,000 patients were moved 34,715 times in 1year which equates to an average of 2.4 transfers per patient. On average, patient transfers took 42min and bed transfers took 11min of nurses' time. Based on the frequency of patient moves, 11.3 full-time equivalent nurses are needed to move patients within the site hospital each month. ConclusionTransferring patients is workload intensive on nurses' time and should be included in nursing workload measurement systems. Relevance to clinical practiceNurses at the site hospital spend over 1700hr each month on activities associated with transferring patients, meaning that less time is available for nursing care.

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