2018
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.14632
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Adding unregulated nursing support workers to ward staffing: Exploration of a natural experiment

Abstract: Ward-level factors are key in making appropriate staffing and skill mix choices to limit instability and to consequently avoid negative patient, staff and system outcomes. Consideration of the ward context, alongside effective delegation processes and integration into the care team are imperative when adding nursing support workers.

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Cited by 26 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…The increase in unregulated nursing support workers does not reduce unfinished nursing care. The replacement of nurses by these workers can lead to problems related to an increased workload of nurses due to task delegation and their subsequent supervision (Duffield et al, 2018). From the patient's perspective, unfinished nursing care is also perceived as a problem associated with adverse events, poor communication and poor patient satisfaction (Cho, Mark, Knafl, Chang, & Yoon, 2017).…”
Section: Human Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The increase in unregulated nursing support workers does not reduce unfinished nursing care. The replacement of nurses by these workers can lead to problems related to an increased workload of nurses due to task delegation and their subsequent supervision (Duffield et al, 2018). From the patient's perspective, unfinished nursing care is also perceived as a problem associated with adverse events, poor communication and poor patient satisfaction (Cho, Mark, Knafl, Chang, & Yoon, 2017).…”
Section: Human Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interviewees from NA wards consistently reported heavy workloads on their wards, including a high number of challenging patients in their care. This perception was reflected in the nurse survey results: significantly more nurses on NA wards than on non-NA wards reported they had recently experienced physical assault, threat of assault, or emotional abuse, most often from patients (Duffield et al, 2018 Given the qualitative reports of heavy workloads and challenging patients, it is unsurprising that nurses on NA wards rated the ''Staffing and Resource Adequacy'' on their ward significantly lower than did nurses on non-NA wards (Duffield et al, 2018). These perceptions were confirmed by longitudinal administrative ward data that show nursing assistants were added to wards that had a lower skill mix (percent nursing hours provided by RNs) than wards where nursing assistants were not added (Twigg et al, 2016).…”
Section: Heavy Workloads and Challenging Patientsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, the substitution of RNs with less qualified, lower paid nursing assistants is justified on efficiency grounds: to allow RNs more time to focus on more complex clinical tasks (Kleinman & Saccomano, ; Spilsbury et al, ). However, the efficiency rationale for substitution is by no means proven since both hospital and ward‐level studies have associated lower skillmix with poorer patient and nurse outcomes (Aiken et al, ; Duffield et al, ; Twigg, Myers, Duffield, Giles, & Evans, ). Moreover, nursing assistants’ lower autonomy and skills means RNs must spend more time on communication and supervision (Duffield et al, ; Hasson, McKenna, & Keeney, ; Saccomano & Pinto‐Zipp, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the efficiency rationale for substitution is by no means proven since both hospital and ward‐level studies have associated lower skillmix with poorer patient and nurse outcomes (Aiken et al, ; Duffield et al, ; Twigg, Myers, Duffield, Giles, & Evans, ). Moreover, nursing assistants’ lower autonomy and skills means RNs must spend more time on communication and supervision (Duffield et al, ; Hasson, McKenna, & Keeney, ; Saccomano & Pinto‐Zipp, ). The strategy of using temporary staff (whether internal casual nurses or external agency nurses) to manage fluctuations in patient demand rather than permanently staffing spare capacity can place similar pressure on nursing workloads.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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