Mitigating this serious threat to health and safety

Are you getting the recommended 7 to 9 hours of sleep in a 24-hour period? According to ANA Enterprise’s new Healthy Nurse Healthy Nation® survey results, 40% of nurses and nursing students surveyed aren’t getting this much-needed rest, and 14% report nodding off or falling asleep while driving in the past 30 days. The American Nurses Foundation “Pulse on the nation’s nurses COVID-19 survey series: Mental health and wellness” revealed that 60% of nurses reported difficulty sleeping in the past 14 days.

Nurse fatigue threatens nurses’ health, their patients’ safety, and public health. Nurses and their employers must work together to mitigate fatigue.

The American Nurses Association position statement on addressing nurse fatigue to promote safety and health recommends that RNs work no more than 40 hours of professional nursing during a 7-day period and that “organizations establish an evidence-based staffing plan to address registered nurse responsibilities in extreme or unusual situations, when nurses and employers are at risk of being pushed beyond their physical capacity.”

Nurses and their employers can implement the following strategies to alleviate nurse fatigue.

Nurses at home

Nurses at work

Employers

Nurses and employers must work together to ensure manageable shifts, optimal staffing, and a safety culture that allows nurses to report fatigue in themselves and others, as well as errors, incidents, and near misses without fear of reprisal. These reports must then be carefully analyzed by an interprofessional group to enact safer practices and policies. AN

Holly Carpenter, Kendra McMillan, and Ruth Francis work in the Nursing Practice and Work Environment Department at the American Nurses Association.

References

ANA Enterprise. Pulse on the nation’s nurses COVID-19 survey series: Mental health and wellness. nursingworld.org/practice-policy/work-environment/health-safety/disaster-preparedness/coronavirus/what-you-need-to-know/mental-health-and-wellbeing-survey

Hittle BM, Wong IS, Caruso CC. Managing fatigue during times of crisis: Guidance for nurses, managers, and other healthcare workers. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. April 2, 2020. blogs.cdc.gov/niosh-science-blog/2020/04/02/fatigue-crisis-hcw

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. What workers and employers can do to manage workplace fatigue during COVID-19. May 19, 2020. cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/managing-workplace-fatigue.html?deliveryName=USCDC_10_4-DM27902