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Problems associated with nursing staff shortage: An analysis of the first 3600 incident reports submitted to the Australian Incident Monitoring Study (AIMS-ICU)

journal contribution
posted on 1998-01-01, 00:00 authored by U Beckmann, Ian BaldwinIan Baldwin, M Durie, A Morrison, L Shaw
Although many studies have attempted to define appropriate nursing staff levels, allocation and patient dependency, minimal data is available on the effect of nursing staff shortage (NSS) on quality of care provided in intensive care. This study aimed to identify incidents associated with staff shortage as reported to the Australian Incident Monitoring Study-ICU (AIMS-ICU) project and to assess their estimated effect on patient outcome. A search of narrative keywords and contributing factors identified 89 nursing staff shortage incidents (NSS-INCIDENTS) and 373 incidents involving nursing staff shortage contributing factors (NSS-CF). NSS resulted from inappropriate rostering for current patient load (81%) and inability to respond to increased unit activity (19%). Most frequent associated incidents included problems with: drug administration/documentation (47), patient supervision (20), set-up of ventilators/ equipment (16), and accidental extubation (14). Undesirable patient outcomes included: major physiological change (22%), patient/relative dissatisfaction (12%), and physical injury (3%). This study suggests that inadequate staffing results in incidents and compromised patient safety.

History

Journal

Anaesthesia and Intensive Care

Volume

26

Pagination

396-400

Location

United States

ISSN

0310-057X

eISSN

1448-0271

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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