Abstract

Objective: There is limited published research supporting the effectiveness of nursing workload measurement to comprehensively measure nursing workload and to formulate nurse resource need. Predictive accuracy is impaired due to variation in direct and indirect care-related activities across measurement instruments. This study aimed to (1) identify common nursing activities considered by nurse managers for staffing decision-making, (2) systematically review such nursing activities in relation to existing nursing workload instruments and Nursing Intervention Classification taxonomy, and (3) describe challenges perceived by managers in staffing decision-making.Methods: A survey was developed from an inclusive review of 20 nursing workload instruments collectively measuring 502 nursing activities. Nurse managers in 13 medical-surgical and two intensive care units at a Midwest healthcare organization identified nursing activities considered daily for staffing decision-making.Results: Twenty-one activities were commonly considered by at least 90 percent of managers (n = 13) for daily staffing decisionmaking, although none of the instruments reviewed included all 21 activities.Conclusions: Lack of a standardized framework for nursing workload measurement might have led to nurse managers’ different perceptions about appropriate determinants of these measurements. A standardized approach for measuring nursing workload would facilitate benchmarking for estimating nurse resource need. Further research is needed to design a systematic infrastructure that ensures staffing to meet patient care need. A process is also needed to alleviate the challenges in staffing decision-making that nurse managers face, such as fluctuations in census and patient acuity, nurse competency-based patient assignments, and limited information resources for staffing estimation.

Highlights

  • This study aimed to (1) identify common nursing activities defined as any treatment based upon clinical judgment and considered by nurse managers for staffing decision-making knowledge that a nurse performs to enhance patient/client in one large health organization, (2) systematically review outcomes.[29]

  • In the NIC, each intervention is composed of a such nursing activities in relation to existing nursing workload measurement (NWM) tools and label, a definition, and a set of activities that a nurse performs the Nursing Intervention Classification (NIC), and (3) de- to carry out the intervention

  • This study confirmed that staffing decision-making repre- nants of nursing workload across units are relevant to the sented a central activity for nursing managers since the ma- dominant patient populations in each unit

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Ber of registered nurses (RNs) is likely the best strategy to facilitate high care quality; with escalating health-. Challenge due to the limited use of objective tools to estimate The NIC has a taxonomy structure in four levels; at the top staffing and the tools’ limited comprehensiveness in fully re- level, there are seven domains including Physiological Basic, flecting the nursing workload required for addressing patient Physiological Complex, Behavioral, Safety, Family, Health care needs. This study aimed to (1) identify common nursing activities defined as any treatment based upon clinical judgment and considered by nurse managers for staffing decision-making knowledge that a nurse performs to enhance patient/client in one large health organization, (2) systematically review outcomes.[29] In the NIC, each intervention is composed of a such nursing activities in relation to existing NWM tools and label, a definition, and a set of activities that a nurse performs the Nursing Intervention Classification (NIC), and (3) de- to carry out the intervention. Scribe challenges perceived by managers in staffing decision- Referring to the definitions of and nursing activities related making

METHODS
Survey procedure
RESULTS
Promotion
Findings
DISCUSSION
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