Abstract

PurposeDespite the generation of mass data by the nursing workforce, determining the impact of the contribution to patient safety remains challenging. Several cross-sectional studies have indicated a relationship between staffing and safety. The purpose of this paper is to uncover possible associations and explore if a deeper understanding of relationships between staffing and other factors such as safety could be revealed within routinely collected national data sets.Design/methodology/approachTwo longitudinal routinely collected data sets consisting of 30 years of UK nurse staffing data and seven years of National Health Service (NHS) benchmark data such as survey results, safety and other indicators were used. A correlation matrix was built and a linear correlation operation was applied (Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient).FindingsA number of associations were revealed within both the UK staffing data set and the NHS benchmarking data set. However, the challenges of using these data sets soon became apparent.Practical implicationsStaff time and effort are required to collect these data. The limitations of these data sets include inconsistent data collection and quality. The mode of data collection and the itemset collected should be reviewed to generate a data set with robust clinical application.Originality/valueThis paper revealed that relationships are likely to be complex and non-linear; however, the main contribution of the paper is the identification of the limitations of routinely collected data. Much time and effort is expended in collecting this data; however, its validity, usefulness and method of routine national data collection appear to require re-examination.

Highlights

  • Nursing care providers, such as registered nurses (RNs) and unregistered healthcare support workers (HCSW), provide most patient contact time in the UK

  • No correlations involving quality scores and staffing variables were revealed. This finding does not mean that quality scores are independent; staffing levels are likely to influence patient satisfaction (Aiken et al, 2012); our data analysis does not reflect that, which is likely to echo data depth and veracity nationally

  • No correlation was found between quality scores and staffing levels

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Summary

Introduction

Nursing care providers, such as registered nurses (RNs) and unregistered healthcare support workers (HCSW), provide most patient contact time in the UK. This workforce represents the largest staff group and subsequently the largest expenditure (NHS Confederation, 2015). We have an opportunity to explore this relationship by mining two large, UK wide data sets, which include data from a National Health Service (NHS) benchmarking and staffing perspective over several years. Our research focusses on understanding how RN and HCSW staffing levels influence patient outcomes and on identifying patterns that could help improve patient care. Nursing work is complex (Hall, 1964; Ebright et al, 2003; Leary et al, 2008; Warren et al, 2012); when portrayed as supply and demand, inpatient nursing work is often represented as

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