Is staff well-being and communication enhanced by multidisciplinary work shift evaluations?

Judith K Sluiter, Albert P Bos, Dirk Tol, Mart Calff, Margot Krijnen, Monique H W Frings-Dresen
Author Information
  1. Judith K Sluiter: Coronel Institute for Occupational and Environmental Health, Academic Medical Center, Meibergdreef 9, 1105 AZ, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. j.sluiter@amc.uva.nl

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study the implementation of multidisciplinary structured work shift evaluations at a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) to enhance team communication.
DESIGN AND SETTING: Prospective, repeated measurements design, comparison of pre/post measurements and process measures in a Dutch tertiary care, university-affiliated PICU.
PARTICIPANTS: All 61 PICU staff members.
INTERVENTIONS: Implementing multidisciplinary structured work shift evaluations. Before the implementation phase the PICU team received feedback training and eight participants (four physicians, four nurses) were trained as "work shift evaluation leader."
MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Outcome measures covered: (a) quality and process of the implementation through prestructured checklists during the 3 months of implementation, (b) a subjective evaluation of a feedback training on team communication as anticipated action and on the level of communication (about patients and with colleagues), and (c) emotional exhaustion complaints and work-related fatigue. The interdisciplinary structured work shift evaluations were implemented successfully as planned during the work shift; all staff were trained ahead, and the process was followed almost completely. Almost two-thirds (62%) of the staff felt a positive influence on team communication. Almost all staff members (92%) were satisfied regarding communication with their colleagues after the intervention, compared to 76% before. Emotional exhaustion in the PICU team decreased significantly after the implementation, but no differences in work-related fatigue levels were found.
CONCLUSIONS: As organizational change the implementation of a multidisciplinary structured work shift evaluation at a PICU was successful and team communication improved. Emotional exhaustion decreased during the study period.

References

  1. Ann Med. 2000 Jul;32(5):323-8 [PMID: 10949063]
  2. Intensive Care Med. 2004 Aug;30(8):1514-25 [PMID: 15292983]
  3. Nurs Crit Care. 1996 Jul-Aug;1(4):188-93 [PMID: 9594108]
  4. Med Care. 2004 Feb;42(2 Suppl):II57-66 [PMID: 14734943]
  5. Chest. 2004 Apr;125(4):1518-21 [PMID: 15078768]
  6. J Emerg Nurs. 1993 Oct;19(5):431-6 [PMID: 8277657]
  7. Pediatrics. 2003 Sep;112(3 Pt 1):553-8 [PMID: 12949283]
  8. Intensive Care Nurs. 1989 Sep;5(3):134-41 [PMID: 2685106]
  9. Crit Care Med. 2000 Sep;28(9):3281-8 [PMID: 11008993]
  10. Crit Care Med. 2003 Jan;31(1):113-9 [PMID: 12545003]
  11. N Engl J Med. 1998 Jan 15;338(3):171-9 [PMID: 9428819]
  12. Occup Environ Med. 2003 Jun;60 Suppl 1:i62-70 [PMID: 12782749]
  13. Psychol Rep. 1995 Jun;76(3 Pt 2):1083-90 [PMID: 7480470]
  14. Ergonomics. 1999 Apr;42(4):573-83 [PMID: 10204421]
  15. Intensive Care Med. 2003 Jan;29(1):75-82 [PMID: 12528026]
  16. Prof Nurse. 1998 Aug;13(11):744-7 [PMID: 9782987]

MeSH Term

Communication
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Humans
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric
Personnel, Hospital
Physician-Nurse Relations
Stress, Psychological
Surveys and Questionnaires
Workload

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0shiftcommunicationimplementationworkPICUteamstaffmultidisciplinarystructuredevaluationsprocessevaluationexhaustionstudycareANDmeasurementsmeasuresmembersfeedbacktrainingfourtrainedcolleagueswork-relatedfatigueAlmostEmotionaldecreasedOBJECTIVE:pediatricintensiveunitenhanceDESIGNSETTING:Prospectiverepeateddesigncomparisonpre/postDutchtertiaryuniversity-affiliatedPARTICIPANTS:61INTERVENTIONS:Implementingphasereceivedeightparticipantsphysiciansnurses"workleader"MEASUREMENTSRESULTS:Outcomecovered:qualityprestructuredchecklists3monthsbsubjectiveanticipatedactionlevelpatientscemotionalcomplaintsinterdisciplinaryimplementedsuccessfullyplannedaheadfollowedalmostcompletelytwo-thirds62%feltpositiveinfluence92%satisfiedregardinginterventioncompared76%significantlydifferenceslevelsfoundCONCLUSIONS:organizationalchangesuccessfulimprovedperiodwell-beingenhancedevaluations?

Similar Articles

Cited By