Litcius/Paper detail

Nurses' autonomy in sleep management improves patients' sleep quality: A cross‐sectional study

Katarzyna Lis, Natalia Sak‐Dankosky, Bożena Czarkowska‐Pączek

2020Nursing in Critical Care13 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The current literature indicates that intensive care (ICU) patients' sleep quality is generally poor, which is associated with serious physical and psychological consequences. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To describe the practices nurses use to provide good-quality sleep to adult ICU patients and assess nurses' perceptions of patients' sleep quality and nurses' professional autonomy in sleep management. DESIGN: A descriptive-correlational, cross-sectional study. METHODS: A total of 232 ICU nurses from four hospitals in Poland were recruited. Data were collected between May and August 2019 using a previously developed questionnaire and analysed using descriptive statistics and non-parametric tests. RESULTS: A total of 119 nurses took part in the study (response rate: 51%). On average, nurses rated patients' sleep quality as moderate (4.44 ± 2.23, scale 0-10). Most of the respondents (95.8%) said they did not use any sleep protocol. Various strategies to improve patients' sleep were used sporadically (2.64 ± 1.55, scale 1-5). The use of sleep quality assessment methods was positively correlated with patients' sleep quality (rho = 0.22, P = .02). Nurses' professional autonomy regarding sleep management was assessed as average (4.34 ± 2.43, scale 0-10) and was correlated with the patients' sleep quality (rho = 0.25, P < .01). Nurses who rated their autonomy in patients' sleep management more highly (rho = 0.29, P < .01) and more often influenced patients' sleep decisions (rho = 0.24, P < .01) used more methods to improve patients' sleep. CONCLUSIONS: Strengthening the professional autonomy of ICU nurses and creating a reliable sleep assessment and improvement tool, which would describe strategies nurses can implement independently could increase sleep quality among ICU patients. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: Addressing organizational problems, which hamper the patients' sleep management by ICU nurses could result in using more strategies to provide good-quality sleep to ICU patients. There is a need for clinical guidelines regarding patients' sleep management to help educate and guide nurses how to independently use sleep improvement methods.

Topics & Concepts

Sleep (system call)MedicineAutonomyCross-sectional studyDescriptive statisticsPittsburgh Sleep Quality IndexSleep qualityIntensive careNursingScale (ratio)Physical therapyPsychiatryIntensive care medicineInsomniaPolitical sciencePhysicsLawComputer scienceMathematicsStatisticsQuantum mechanicsPathologyOperating systemIntensive Care Unit Cognitive DisordersSleep and related disordersNursing education and management