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Factors associated with nursing workload in three intensive care units

Diana Isabel Cáceres Rivera, Claudia Consuelo Torres Contreras, Luís Alberto López Romero

2021Revista da Escola de Enfermagem da USP20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the nursing workload in intensive care units (ICUs) and the factors associated with the Nursing Activities Score (NAS). METHOD: An analytical cross-sectional study was carried out in three ICUs in Bucaramanga, Colombia, between February 2018 and February 2020. The nursing workload was estimated based on the NAS. A descriptive and bivariate analysis stratified by ICU was performed using a robust multiple linear regression model, and the factors associated with the nursing workload (p < 0.05) were estimated. RESULTS: In this study, 362 records were included. The median NAS was 68.1 points (Q1:47.2-Q3:116.7). APACHE II (β = 3.13, CI: 95% 2.28; 3.98), days of stay in ICU ≥3 (β = 16.78, CI: 95% 6.15; 27.41), surgery provenance service (β = 22.31, CI: 95% 9.76; 34.86), and traumatology and emergencies diagnostic category (β = 33.72, CI 95%: 9.90; 57.53) were associated with high NAS scores. CONCLUSION: The nursing staff spend approximately 70% of their time on a single patient, and administrative work takes up most of their time. Hospital stays of longer than 3 days, high APACHE II score, coming from the surgery department, and having a diagnosis of trauma and emergency were associated with a high workload.

Topics & Concepts

WorkloadMedicineIntensive careTraumatologyEmergency medicineNursingNursing careIntensive care medicineOrthopedic surgerySurgeryOperating systemComputer scienceSepsis Diagnosis and TreatmentFamily and Patient Care in Intensive Care UnitsTrauma and Emergency Care Studies