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Health Nurses Survey. Dr. Judith Shamian, President & CEO April 19, 2007. The Journey:…1999…2007…. 1999-We had a problem….Nurses had/have the highest absenteeism rate among 40+ occupations. Fast Forward.
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Health Nurses Survey Dr. Judith Shamian, President & CEO April 19, 2007
1999-We had a problem….Nurses had/have the highest absenteeism rate among 40+ occupations.
Fast Forward “The way to better healthcare is through healthier healthcare workplaces and it is unacceptable to work in, receive care in, govern, manage and fund unhealthy healthcare workplaces” QW-QHC 2006 (Quality worklife-quality healthcare collaborative)
QWQHC= QUALITY WORKLIFE-QUALITY HEALTH CARE COLLABORATIVE • Partnership among 11 National Organizations: CCHSA, CCHSE, CNA, CMA, CHA, CFNU, CHSRF, ACAHO,ACEN, NQI, ONP-HC and 40 health care leaders who working together to develop an integrated action strategy to transform the quality of work life for Canada’s healthcare providers
Background • First nationally representative survey of nurses in Canada • Data collection: October 2005 - January 2006 • Frame: 26 nursing organizations and regulating bodies 2
2005 National Survey of the Work and Health Survey • Responding sample: 18,676 • Response rate: 80% • Survey - partnership between Canadian Institute for Health Information, Health Canada and Statistics Canada • Advisory Committee 3
Why a national survey? • Nurses represent largest group in the health care sector • Concern that “health care reform” has led to: • Fewer jobs • Increased workload • Higher patient - staff ratios • Other concerns: • Absenteeism (illness, stress, disability) • Injuries • Job satisfaction 4
Survey objectives • Provide information on the health and working conditions of the 3 regulated nursing professions (RNs, LPNs and RPNs). • Establish baseline data for future monitoring. • Make comparisons among provinces and combined northern territories. • Compare nurses with the total employed population. 5
Canada’s nurses • 315,000 nurses; most are women (94.5%) • Nova Scotia has 11,900 (3.8% of total) • Types of nurses: • 79% Registered Nurses (RNs), 75% in NS • 20% Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs) • 2% Registered Psychiatric Nurses (RPNs) 6
Surveys used for comparisons of nurses with total employed population • Canadian Community Health Survey, 2005 • Workplace and Employee Survey, 2003 • Canadian Labour Force Survey, October 2005
Canada’s nurses • Average age: 44.3 – significantly older than employed population (females 3.4 years older; males 1 year older) • Work settings: • 59% hospitals • 16% long-term care facilities • 12% community health • 13% other 7
Household composition • About 70% of nurses live in households as part of a couple, similar to the total employed population (21+). • However, nurses are more likely than all employed women and men to be single parents, or to be living alone: • 9% of female nurses vs. 7% of employed women (21+) are single parents; • 14% of female nurses vs. 11% of employed women (21+) live alone. Single parent Lives alone
Employment characteristics • Higher proportion of nurses are unionized: 82% of nurses vs. 34% of all employed • Nurses worked more paid overtime: • Women: 30% of nurses vs. 13% of all employed • Men: 37% of nurses vs. 28% of all employed • Among nurses, unpaid overtime more common than paid overtime; 50% reported unpaid overtime, averaging 4 extra hours per week. 8
Employment Characteristics • Nearly 66% of Nurses in Nova Scotia have full-time jobs • 61% in Canada overall • 42% of Nurses in Nova Scotia put in more than 40 hours a week, this was much greater than the rest of Canada – 37%
Employment characteristics • Nurses more likely to have more than 1 job: • Women: 19% vs. 9% • Men: 23% vs. 9% • Female nurses more likely than employed women to work long hours (40+ hours / week): • 37% vs. 25% 9
Quality of care • Only 8% of Nurses in Nova Scotia said that their Nursing team had delivered poor or fair care, this was significantly lower than the rest of the country, 12% • Perceived changes in quality of care in past year: • 27%: deteriorated (25% in NS) • 16%: improved (same in NS) • 57%: no change • Main reasons given for deterioration: • fewer staff (67%) • too many patients (38%) • Main reasons given for improvement: • Improved management / Reorganization (30%) • More staff (29%) 10
Nurses’ reports of adverse events (occasional or frequent) in past year 11
Nurses reporting physical assault by a patient in past year 12
Physical assault by a patient in past year, by area of nursing %
Work stress • High job strain: psychological demands of the job exceed worker’s discretion in deciding how to do it • 31% female nurses • 26% all employed females • Low co-worker support • 45% female nurses • 33% all employed females • High physical demands • 62% female nurses • 38% all employed females 14
Job dissatisfaction • Job dissatisfaction more common in nurses than in total employed • Women: 12% vs. 9% • Men: 12% vs. 8% • Nova Scotian Nurses: 8% vs. 12% rest of Canadian Nurses • Only 4% of nurses planned to leave nursing in the next year―mostly for retirement 15
Working relations • Working relations between nurses and physicians • 87%: good working relations • 81%: a lot of team work • 89%: high levels of collaboration 16
Physical and mental health • Nurses’ physical health similar to that of all employed persons. • Mental health of nurses worse. • Women: 5.5% of nurses vs. 4.0% of all employed women (21+) • Men: 5.6% of nurses vs. 3.5% of all employed men (21+) % Physical health Mental health
Absence from work • 61%: 1+ absence in the past year due to a health problem (66% in NS) • 14.5 sick-days, on average • 14%: took 20+ sick-days in past year 18
Summary of multivariate modelling relating fair/poor physical or mental health to working conditions • Few associations emerged between ill health and factors such as shift work or long hours. The factors most consistently related to the variables reflecting nurses’ health were: • Low autonomy • Low control over practice • Poor nurse-physician working relations • Low respect from superiors • Role overload
What does the Data Show? Work life • The proportion of the nursing workforce with multiple employers increased from 12.8% in 2004 to 14.1% in 2005 (CIHI 2006) • The majority of nurses in management positions range in age from 46-55: (Heather Laschinger et al)
BC AB SK MB ON QC NS NB PE NL YK NT NU Planned Activities to Address Workplace Issues X X X X X X X X Succession Planning X X Relocation Assistance X Bursaries and Tuition Support X X X X X Incentive eg. Education Programs Enrollment X Full-time jobs for nurse graduates X Continuing Education X X X X Career Laddering X Mentorship X X X Professional Development and Training X X X X X Salary adjustments X Conversion of Casual Work to Permanent X Leadership Training X X X X Occupational health and safety and programs to reduce injuries X X X Phased Retirement Programs X Employee Recognition Program X X FPT Health Human Resources (HHR)Action Plans & Targets (reported ones only) Initiatives & Targets*
What are some of the “new/old ideas” • Succession Planning • Generation Gap • Practice Issues
1. Succession Planning • Recognize emerging leaders • Support and guide emerging leaders • Provide opportunities • Leadership Pipeline • Mentorship
2. Understanding the Generation Gap How are values different for the next generation filling health care positions?
3. Practice Issues • Span of Control • Workload • Autonomy (moral distress) • Violence in the Workplace • Interprofessional relationships
THANKYOU Dr. Judith Shamian Judith.shamian@von.ca www.von.ca
www.nursingleadershipstudy.ca • www.von.ca • www.vifamily.ca • http://www.longwoods.com/home.php?cat=456.