Hospital nurse-staffing models and patient- and staff-related outcomes.


Journal

The Cochrane database of systematic reviews
ISSN: 1469-493X
Titre abrégé: Cochrane Database Syst Rev
Pays: England
ID NLM: 100909747

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
23 04 2019
Historique:
pubmed: 24 4 2019
medline: 4 6 2019
entrez: 24 4 2019
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Nurses comprise the largest component of the health workforce worldwide and numerous models of workforce allocation and profile have been implemented. These include changes in skill mix, grade mix or qualification mix, staff-allocation models, staffing levels, nursing shifts, or nurses' work patterns. This is the first update of our review published in 2011. The purpose of this review was to explore the effect of hospital nurse-staffing models on patient and staff-related outcomes in the hospital setting, specifically to identify which staffing model(s) are associated with: 1) better outcomes for patients, 2) better staff-related outcomes, and, 3) the impact of staffing model(s) on cost outcomes. CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, two other databases and two trials registers were searched on 22 March 2018 together with reference checking, citation searching and contact with study authors to identify additional studies. We included randomised trials, non-randomised trials, controlled before-after studies and interrupted-time-series or repeated-measures studies of interventions relating to hospital nurse-staffing models. Participants were patients and nursing staff working in hospital settings. We included any objective reported measure of patient-, staff-related, or economic outcome. The most important outcomes included in this review were: nursing-staff turnover, patient mortality, patient readmissions, patient attendances at the emergency department (ED), length of stay, patients with pressure ulcers, and costs. We worked independently in pairs to extract data from each potentially relevant study and to assess risk of bias and the certainty of the evidence. We included 19 studies, 17 of which were included in the analysis and eight of which we identified for this update. We identified four types of interventions relating to hospital nurse-staffing models:- introduction of advanced or specialist nurses to the nursing workforce;- introduction of nursing assistive personnel to the hospital workforce;- primary nursing; and- staffing models.The studies were conducted in the USA, the Netherlands, UK, Australia, and Canada and included patients with cancer, asthma, diabetes and chronic illness, on medical, acute care, intensive care and long-stay psychiatric units. The risk of bias across studies was high, with limitations mainly related to blinding of patients and personnel, allocation concealment, sequence generation, and blinding of outcome assessment.The addition of advanced or specialist nurses to hospital nurse staffing may lead to little or no difference in patient mortality (3 studies, 1358 participants). It is uncertain whether this intervention reduces patient readmissions (7 studies, 2995 participants), patient attendances at the ED (6 studies, 2274 participants), length of stay (3 studies, 907 participants), number of patients with pressure ulcers (1 study, 753 participants), or costs (3 studies, 617 participants), as we assessed the evidence for these outcomes as being of very low certainty. It is uncertain whether adding nursing assistive personnel to the hospital workforce reduces costs (1 study, 6769 participants), as we assessed the evidence for this outcome to be of very low certainty. It is uncertain whether primary nursing (3 studies, > 464 participants) or staffing models (1 study, 647 participants) reduces nursing-staff turnover, or if primary nursing (2 studies, > 138 participants) reduces costs, as we assessed the evidence for these outcomes to be of very low certainty. The findings of this review should be treated with caution due to the limited amount and quality of the published research that was included. We have most confidence in our finding that the introduction of advanced or specialist nurses may lead to little or no difference in one patient outcome (i.e. mortality) with greater uncertainty about other patient outcomes (i.e. readmissions, ED attendance, length of stay and pressure ulcer rates). The evidence is of insufficient certainty to draw conclusions about the effectiveness of other types of interventions, including new nurse-staffing models and introduction of nursing assistive personnel, on patient, staff and cost outcomes. Although it has been seven years since the original review was published, the certainty of the evidence about hospital nurse staffing still remains very low.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Nurses comprise the largest component of the health workforce worldwide and numerous models of workforce allocation and profile have been implemented. These include changes in skill mix, grade mix or qualification mix, staff-allocation models, staffing levels, nursing shifts, or nurses' work patterns. This is the first update of our review published in 2011.
OBJECTIVES
The purpose of this review was to explore the effect of hospital nurse-staffing models on patient and staff-related outcomes in the hospital setting, specifically to identify which staffing model(s) are associated with: 1) better outcomes for patients, 2) better staff-related outcomes, and, 3) the impact of staffing model(s) on cost outcomes.
SEARCH METHODS
CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, two other databases and two trials registers were searched on 22 March 2018 together with reference checking, citation searching and contact with study authors to identify additional studies.
SELECTION CRITERIA
We included randomised trials, non-randomised trials, controlled before-after studies and interrupted-time-series or repeated-measures studies of interventions relating to hospital nurse-staffing models. Participants were patients and nursing staff working in hospital settings. We included any objective reported measure of patient-, staff-related, or economic outcome. The most important outcomes included in this review were: nursing-staff turnover, patient mortality, patient readmissions, patient attendances at the emergency department (ED), length of stay, patients with pressure ulcers, and costs.
DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS
We worked independently in pairs to extract data from each potentially relevant study and to assess risk of bias and the certainty of the evidence.
MAIN RESULTS
We included 19 studies, 17 of which were included in the analysis and eight of which we identified for this update. We identified four types of interventions relating to hospital nurse-staffing models:- introduction of advanced or specialist nurses to the nursing workforce;- introduction of nursing assistive personnel to the hospital workforce;- primary nursing; and- staffing models.The studies were conducted in the USA, the Netherlands, UK, Australia, and Canada and included patients with cancer, asthma, diabetes and chronic illness, on medical, acute care, intensive care and long-stay psychiatric units. The risk of bias across studies was high, with limitations mainly related to blinding of patients and personnel, allocation concealment, sequence generation, and blinding of outcome assessment.The addition of advanced or specialist nurses to hospital nurse staffing may lead to little or no difference in patient mortality (3 studies, 1358 participants). It is uncertain whether this intervention reduces patient readmissions (7 studies, 2995 participants), patient attendances at the ED (6 studies, 2274 participants), length of stay (3 studies, 907 participants), number of patients with pressure ulcers (1 study, 753 participants), or costs (3 studies, 617 participants), as we assessed the evidence for these outcomes as being of very low certainty. It is uncertain whether adding nursing assistive personnel to the hospital workforce reduces costs (1 study, 6769 participants), as we assessed the evidence for this outcome to be of very low certainty. It is uncertain whether primary nursing (3 studies, > 464 participants) or staffing models (1 study, 647 participants) reduces nursing-staff turnover, or if primary nursing (2 studies, > 138 participants) reduces costs, as we assessed the evidence for these outcomes to be of very low certainty.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS
The findings of this review should be treated with caution due to the limited amount and quality of the published research that was included. We have most confidence in our finding that the introduction of advanced or specialist nurses may lead to little or no difference in one patient outcome (i.e. mortality) with greater uncertainty about other patient outcomes (i.e. readmissions, ED attendance, length of stay and pressure ulcer rates). The evidence is of insufficient certainty to draw conclusions about the effectiveness of other types of interventions, including new nurse-staffing models and introduction of nursing assistive personnel, on patient, staff and cost outcomes. Although it has been seven years since the original review was published, the certainty of the evidence about hospital nurse staffing still remains very low.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31012954
doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007019.pub3
pmc: PMC6478038
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Meta-Analysis Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Systematic Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

CD007019

Commentaires et corrections

Type : UpdateOf

Références

West J Nurs Res. 2012 Jun;34(4):455-74
pubmed: 21540354
Int J Nurs Stud. 2012 Jan;49(1):15-20
pubmed: 21813126
Health Econ. 2014 Aug;23(8):935-50
pubmed: 23893946
Nurs Econ. 1994 Nov-Dec;12(6):300-8
pubmed: 7885486
Health Econ. 1995 Jan-Feb;4(1):57-72
pubmed: 7780528
Int Nurs Rev. 2007 Mar;54(1):56-62
pubmed: 17305958
Ann Intern Med. 2013 Mar 5;158(5 Pt 1):ITC3-1
pubmed: 23460071
J Adv Nurs. 2005 Jul;51(1):73-82
pubmed: 15941463
BMJ. 1996 Aug 3;313(7052):275-83
pubmed: 8704542
Policy Polit Nurs Pract. 2007 Nov;8(4):238-50
pubmed: 18337430
Musculoskeletal Care. 2012 Dec;10(4):196-201
pubmed: 22696423
Ann Intern Med. 2013 Mar 5;158(5 Pt 2):404-9
pubmed: 23460097
Nurs Stand. 2006 Oct 25-31;21(7):22-5
pubmed: 17087410
Birth. 2000 Sep;27(3):168-73
pubmed: 11251497
J Nurs Adm. 1993 Mar;23(3):29-37
pubmed: 8473926
Evid Rep Technol Assess (Full Rep). 2007 Mar;(151):1-115
pubmed: 17764206
Nurs Manage. 2000 Oct;31(10):42-6
pubmed: 15127557
Oncol Nurs Forum. 2000 Jul;27(6):923-32
pubmed: 10920832
Diabet Med. 2001 Feb;18(2):162-4
pubmed: 11251683
Nurs Manage. 2008 Dec;39(12):30-2
pubmed: 19155862
Int J Nurs Stud. 2016 Nov;63:213-225
pubmed: 27130150
Nurs Res. 2006 Mar-Apr;55(2 Suppl):S75-81
pubmed: 16601638
BMJ. 2008 Apr 26;336(7650):924-6
pubmed: 18436948
Crit Care Nurs Clin North Am. 1999 Jun;11(2):277-82
pubmed: 10838989
Aust Health Rev. 1994;17(2):29-39
pubmed: 10138377
ANS Adv Nurs Sci. 2005 Apr-Jun;28(2):163-74
pubmed: 15920362
J Nurs Adm. 2005 Feb;35(2):74-80
pubmed: 15714099
Aust Health Rev. 2000;23(4):89-96
pubmed: 11256275
J Clin Nurs. 2002 Nov;11(6):773-6
pubmed: 12427182
Age Ageing. 2006 Mar;35(2):148-53
pubmed: 16354710
J Adv Nurs. 2006 Aug;55(4):435-48
pubmed: 16866839
BMJ. 2009 Feb 10;338:b270
pubmed: 19208715
Med J Aust. 2015 Jul 6;203(1):33-8
pubmed: 26126565
Nurs Econ. 1991 Mar-Apr;9(2):97-104
pubmed: 1902557
Health Technol Assess. 2001;5(17):1-47
pubmed: 11532237
Aust J Adv Nurs. 1993 Mar-May;10(3):27-39
pubmed: 8240762
Med Care. 1977 Oct;15(10):830-7
pubmed: 909325
J Nurs Manag. 2007 Jan;15(1):64-71
pubmed: 17207009
J Adv Nurs. 1996 Oct;24(4):694-702
pubmed: 8894886
Diabetes Educ. 1994 Mar-Apr;20(2):125-8
pubmed: 7851225
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Jun 15;(6):CD006563
pubmed: 21678358
Qual Saf Health Care. 2009 Jun;18(3):181-8
pubmed: 19467999
Am J Med. 2005 Oct;118(10):1148-53
pubmed: 16194647
Int J Nurs Stud. 2011 May;48(5):540-8
pubmed: 20696429
Nurs Econ. 1990 Jan-Feb;8(1):36-44
pubmed: 2300221
Pediatr Nurs. 2007 Jan-Feb;33(1):29-35; quiz 35-6
pubmed: 17410998
Nurs Res. 2012 Sep-Oct;61(5):326-32
pubmed: 22935769
J Nurs Adm. 2011 Mar;41(3):138-43
pubmed: 21336042
Policy Polit Nurs Pract. 2005 Aug;6(3):198-210
pubmed: 16443975
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Jul 06;(7):CD007019
pubmed: 21735407
ISRN Nurs. 2013 Aug 20;2013:916061
pubmed: 24027640
Nurs Times. 2015 Jan 14-20;111(3):12-4
pubmed: 26021029
J Clin Nurs. 2015 Mar;24(5-6):683-95
pubmed: 25180964
J Trop Pediatr. 2006 Oct;52(5):376-9
pubmed: 16782724
Ann Intern Med. 2006 Aug 15;145(4):273-83
pubmed: 16908918
J Nurs Adm. 1992 Dec;22(12):28-38
pubmed: 1469485
Cancer Nurs. 2011 Sep-Oct;34(5):376-84
pubmed: 21242774
J Nurs Manag. 2005 Jul;13(4):356-62
pubmed: 15946175
J Nurs Adm. 1981 Nov-Dec;11(11-12):30-6
pubmed: 6915081
Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2008 Dec;34(12):743-7
pubmed: 19119728
J Gen Intern Med. 1996 Nov;11(11):684-8
pubmed: 9120655
J Adv Nurs. 2003 Jun;42(5):442-62
pubmed: 12752865
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2003 Nov 1;168(9):1095-9
pubmed: 12807696
Inquiry. 1983 Summer;20(2):173-84
pubmed: 6222987
J Nurs Adm. 2013 Sep;43(9):475-80
pubmed: 23979037
Health Aff (Millwood). 2004 Jul-Aug;23(4):202-12
pubmed: 15318582
Collegian. 2012;19(4):231-8
pubmed: 23362609
Med Care. 1986 Nov;24(11):1029-43
pubmed: 3773577
J Nurs Care Qual. 2014 Oct-Dec;29(4):318-26
pubmed: 24509243
Crit Care Nurse. 2008 Dec;28(6):51-7
pubmed: 19047695
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Jul 16;7:CD001271
pubmed: 30011347
Aust Crit Care. 1998 Dec;11(4):112-5
pubmed: 10188407
Nurs Res. 2006 Mar-Apr;55(2):137-46
pubmed: 16601626
Int J Evid Based Healthc. 2012 Dec;10(4):324-37
pubmed: 23173657
Diabet Med. 2001 Apr;18(4):301-7
pubmed: 11437861
J Clin Nurs. 1994 Jan;3(1):25-33
pubmed: 8313071
Am J Crit Care. 1993 Jul;2(4):331-8
pubmed: 8358480
J Adv Nurs. 2000 Aug;32(2):292-300
pubmed: 10964175
J Adv Nurs. 1993 Sep;18(9):1424-8
pubmed: 8258601
Arch Psychiatr Nurs. 1990 Apr;4(2):114-23
pubmed: 2357109
Crit Care Nurs Q. 1997 Aug;20(2):28-33
pubmed: 9313424
Can J Nurs Leadersh. 1999 May-Jun;12(2):4-20
pubmed: 11094929
J Nurs Adm. 2006 Jan;36(1):29-33
pubmed: 16404198
Scand J Caring Sci. 1999;13(2):116-22
pubmed: 10633742
Glob Health Action. 2014 Feb 13;7:23611
pubmed: 24560265
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2012 Jun;60(6):1078-84
pubmed: 22690984
Int Nurs Rev. 2015 Jun;62(2):162-70
pubmed: 25639942
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2007 Feb;130(2):262-70
pubmed: 16530916
J Clin Nurs. 2001 Jan;10(1):3-14
pubmed: 11820235
J Nurs Care Qual. 2001 Jul;15(4):60-8
pubmed: 11452642
Med Care. 2011 Apr;49(4):406-14
pubmed: 21407034
Nurs Res. 1991 Mar-Apr;40(2):113-7
pubmed: 2003070
J Nurs Adm. 2004 Jul-Aug;34(7-8):326-37
pubmed: 15303051
CJEM. 2007 Jul;9(4):286-95
pubmed: 17626694
Outcomes Manag Nurs Pract. 1999 Oct-Dec;3(4):161-6
pubmed: 10876541
Int J Nurs Stud. 2006 Nov;43(8):985-1000
pubmed: 16412443
Nurs Stand. 2003 Jan 22-28;17(19):33-6
pubmed: 12613422
Aust Nurs J. 1994 Feb;1(7):22-5
pubmed: 7697164
Nurs Older People. 2016 May;28(4):31-6
pubmed: 27125941
J Adv Nurs. 2005 Aug;51(4):406-13
pubmed: 16086809
Nurs Econ. 1995 Nov-Dec;13(6):367-72, 374
pubmed: 8538811
Intensive Crit Care Nurs. 2007 Dec;23(6):362-9
pubmed: 17681470
West J Nurs Res. 1990 Apr;12(2):188-97; discussion 197-200
pubmed: 2181780
J Nurs Adm. 2008 May;38(5):223-9
pubmed: 18469615
JAMA. 2009 Aug 19;302(7):741-9
pubmed: 19690306

Auteurs

Articles similaires

[Redispensing of expensive oral anticancer medicines: a practical application].

Lisanne N van Merendonk, Kübra Akgöl, Bastiaan Nuijen
1.00
Humans Antineoplastic Agents Administration, Oral Drug Costs Counterfeit Drugs

Smoking Cessation and Incident Cardiovascular Disease.

Jun Hwan Cho, Seung Yong Shin, Hoseob Kim et al.
1.00
Humans Male Smoking Cessation Cardiovascular Diseases Female
Humans United States Aged Cross-Sectional Studies Medicare Part C
1.00
Humans Yoga Low Back Pain Female Male

Classifications MeSH