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Comparative Views of the Impact of the Nursing Shortage on Quality of Hospital Care. AcademyHealth Health Workforce Interest Group June 2, 2007 Peter I. Buerhaus. Disclosure. Funded by : Johnson & Johnson Campaign for Nursing’s Future. Data come from ….
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Comparative Views of the Impact of the Nursing Shortage on Quality of Hospital Care AcademyHealth Health Workforce Interest Group June 2, 2007 Peter I. Buerhaus
Disclosure Funded by: • Johnson & Johnson Campaign for Nursing’s Future
Data come from … • Project to Evaluate the Johnson & Johnson Campaign for Nursing’s Future • Project Personnel: • Peter Buerhaus (PI) and Robert Dittus Vanderbilt University Medical Center • Karen Donelan (Co-PI) and Cate DesRoches Massachusetts General Hospital
National Random Sample Surveys • Public opinion of nursing profession (2001) • Web-based survey of teens (2003) • Parents and teenagers (2003) • Nursing students (2003) • Physicians (2004) • Nurses (2002, 2004 & 2006) co-funded by Nursing Spectrum (Beth Ulrich, Co-PI) • Hospital chief executive officers (2005) • Hospital chief nursing officers (2005) • Public opinion of nursing profession (Completed mid-April, 2007)
National Survey of Physicians • Mailed survey to 840 primary care and specialty physicians reporting more than 20 hours per week in patient care activities • Conducted January 6 through March 5, 2004 • 500 completed surveys, response rate 55% • First survey of physicians on nursing shortage
National Surveys of Registered Nurses • Surveys: • Random national samples • Mail and web based • Conducted by Harris Interactive, Inc. • 2002 survey: Data from 4004 RNs, response rate 55% →2004 survey: Data from 1783 RNs, response rate 53% (co-PI B. Ulrich) • 2006 survey: Data from 1392 RNs, response rate 52% (co-PI B. Ulrich) • Provides national follow-up survey of nurses
National Survey of CEOs and CNOs • Conducted from December 2004 - February 2005 • Telephone interviews and mailed questionnaire • 222 of 443 contacted completed surveys from CNOs, 50% response rate • 142 of 404 contacted completed surveys from CEOs, 31% response rate
Causes, effects, and hospitals’ responses to the nursing shortage Work environment Physical and mental safety Professional practice Working relationships Quality of care RN job and career satisfaction Themes Across Surveys
Observations of RNs, Physicians, Hospital CEOs, and Hospital CNOs See: Buerhaus, Donelan, Ulrich, DesRoches, Dittus. Impact of the Nurse Shortage on Hospital Patient Care: Comparative Perspectives. Health Affairs, 26(3); 2007: 853-862.
In the past year, have you observed any of the following as a result of nursing shortage?
In the past year, have you observed any of the following as a result of nursing shortage?
How much of a problem do you think the shortage of nurses has been for…“Major problem”
How much of a problem do you think the shortage of nurses has been for…“Major problem”
Impact of Shortage on Institute of Medicine’s Six Aims for Improving the Quality of the HealthCare SystemsIOM Report: Crossing the Quality Chasm, 2003 See: Buerhaus, Donelan, DesRoches, Ulrich, Norman, Dittus. Impact of the Nurse Shortage on Hospital Patient Care: Comparative Perspectives. Health Affairs, 26(3); 2007: 853-862.
Patient-centered Effective Safe Timely Efficient Equitable Institute of MedicineSix Aims for Improving Quality of HealthCare System
Patient-Centered Care Patient-centered: Providing care that is respectful of and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values, and ensuring that patient values guide all clinical decisions
Effective Care Effective:Providing services based on scientific knowledge to all who could benefit, and refraining from providing services to those not likely to benefit
Safety of Care Safe:Avoiding injuries to patients from the care that is intended to help them
Timeliness of Care Timely: Reducing waits and sometimes harmful delays for both those who receive and those who give care
Efficiency of Care Efficient:Avoiding waste, including waste of equipment, supplies, ideas, and energy
Equity of Care Equitable:Providing care that does not vary in quality because of personal characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and socioeconomic status
3. Wee bit about the Changing Composition of the RN workforceOlder and More Foreign-Born
Recent Total RN Employment Growth in US by Age Source: Buerhaus, Auerbach, Staiger. Recent trends in the registered nurse labor market in the US: Short-run swings on top of long-term trends. Nursing Economic$, 25(2); 2007: 59-67.
Source: Auerbach, Buerhaus, Staiger “Better Late than Never: Implications of Later Entry into the Profession for the Future Supply of Nurses” Health Affairs, January/February 2007
Source: Buerhaus, Auerbach, Staiger. Recent trends in the registered nurse labor market in the US: Short-run swings on top of long-term trends. Nursing Economic$, 25(2); 2007: 59-67.
Recent Total RN Employment Growth By US and Foreign-Born Status Source: Buerhaus, Auerbach, Staiger. Recent trends in the registered nurse labor market in the US: Short-run swings on top of long-term trends. Nursing Economic$, 25(2); 2007: 59-67.
4. Conclusions • Across the four groups, considerable majorities report shortage harming nearly all of 20 indicators of hospital capacity, care processes, nurses’ ability to provide care, and six IOM aims • Most hold pessimistic views of where the shortage will lead
Conclusions • Several areas where clinicians and executives are not on the same page: • Majorities of RNs and CNO: early detection, safety, quality of work environment; MDs and CEOS don’t agree • Clear majorities of RNs reported six IOM aims affected, physicians were somewhat less likely to agree, executives substantially less likely to agree
Recommendations aimed at promoting problem recognition • Build teamwork • Focus on safety • Early detection of complications • Stronger interdisciplinary curriculum on quality and safety • Recognize that, in the future, teams will be composed of much older and more foreign-born RNs