Title: Spotlight Case
1Spotlight Case
- Nurse Staffing Ratios
- The Crucible of Money, Policy, Research, and
Patient Care
2Source and Credits
- This presentation is based on the August 2009
AHRQ WebMM Spotlight Case - See the full article at http//webmm.ahrq.gov
- CME/CEU credit is available
- Commentary by Victoria Rich, RN, PhD, University
of Pennsylvania School of Nursing - Editor, AHRQ WebMM Robert Wachter, MD
- Spotlight Editor Mary A. Blegen, RN, PhD
- Managing Editor Erin Hartman, MS
3Objectives
- At the conclusion of this educational activity,
participants should be able to - Understand the context for and processes that
hospitals use to design nurse staffing plans - Describe the licensing and regulatory constraints
that shape staffing plans - Appreciate system capacities for covering sudden
changes and overload situations
4Case Nurse Staffing Ratios
- A 68-year-old man was admitted to the ICU with
COPD exacerbation and atrial fibrillation with
rapid ventricular response. Alert and oriented
but frail, the patient was markedly short of
breath and only able to speak in short sentences.
Providers were concerned that he might require
mechanical ventilation. - In the ICU that night, two nurses had called in
sick, and only one patient care assistant was
scheduled for this weekend shift. Due to short
staffing and inability to locate a last-minute
replacement, each existing nurse was assigned
three patients rather than the usual two.
5Shortages of RNs Impact on Care
- When RNs working on hospital units become ill or
otherwise unable to work their assigned shifts,
the patient-to-nurse ratio may suddenly increase - When number of patients assigned to an RN
increases there can be more complications, higher
morbidity, more errors, and higher costs of care
See Notes for references.
6Efforts to Standardize RN Staffing
- Reports from IOM, NQF, and ANA have emphasized
importance of adequate nurse staffing to provide
safe, high quality care - Several state and national groups are collecting
standardized measures of nurse staffing,
including - National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators
(NDNQI) - Collaborative Alliance for Nursing Outcomes
(CalNOC)
See Notes for references.
7Initiatives for Nurse Staffing
- 12 states and the District of Columbia have
legislation or regulations to directly address
nurse staffing levels - 15 states have restrictions on mandatory overtime
See Notes for references.
8The American Nurses Associations Nationwide
State Legislative Agenda
NURSE STAFFING PLANS AND RATIOS
WA
ME
MT
ND
VT
NH
MN
NY
OR
MA
WI
CT
RI
ID
SD
MI
WY
PA
IA
NJ
NE
OH
MD
DE
NV
IN
IL
UT
wv
DC
VA
CO
CA
MO
KS
KY
NC
TN
SC
OK
AR
NM
AZ
GA
AL
MS
AK
TX
LA
FL
Enacted legislation/adopted regulations to date
(12 states plus DC) CA, CT, DC, IL, ME, NJ,
NV, OH, OR, RI, TX,, VT, WA
legislation was either waived or modified from
that which was enacted Introduced in 2008-9 (17
states) AZ, CA, CT, FL, IL, MA, MI, MN, MO, NV,
NH, NJ, NY, OR, PA, TX, WV
HI
June 2009
9The American Nurses Associations Nationwide
State Legislative Agenda
PROHIBITION OF MANDATORY OVERTIME
ME
WA
MT
ND
VT
NY
NH
MN
OR
MA
WI
ID
CT
RI
SD
MI
WY
PA
IA
NJ
NE
OH
MD
NV
DE
IN
IL
UT
wv
VA
DC
CO
CA
KY
KS
MO
NC
TN
SC
OK
AR
NM
AZ
GA
AL
MS
AK
TX
LA
FL
Enacted legislation/adopted regulation to date 15
states (12 states) CT, IL, MD, MN, NH, NJ,
NY, OR, PA, RI, WA, and WV. ( 3 states) have
provisions in regulations CA, MO and
TX Introduced legislation in 2008-9 (11 states)
AK, IL, MA, NC, OH, VT, WA, WI MI, NY,
TX included in staffing bills.
HI
March 2009
10Directives for Nurse Staffing
- State nursing license boards, The Joint
Commission, and the Centers for Medicare
Medicaid Services (CMS) all have standards
designed to help assure adequate nurse staffing
11Hospital Staffing Plans
- Hospital nursing departments develop a staffing
plan for each budgeting cycle - Planning involves nurse leaders, staff nurses,
physicians, hospital administrators, financial
officers, patients, and families - The plans take into account patient volume and
acuity, regulations, benchmarks, and nursing
skill mix and experience
12Staffing Patient Care Units
- Nursing care units plan monthly staffing and
scheduling templates based on their budget - Primary criteria
- Patient acuity and volume
- Skills, competencies, and experience of nurses
on unit - Recommended patient-to-nurse ratios
- 4-5 patients 1 RN on medical/surgical units
- 3-4 patients 1 RN on intermediate units
- 1-2 patients 1 RN on intensive care units
See Notes for references.
13Case Nurse Staffing Ratios (2)
- The nurse implemented the initial orders as the
patient was stabilized on a diltiazem drip for
his atrial fibrillation. The patients
respiratory status stabilized he avoided the
need for non-invasive ventilatory support and
intubation. He began to transition to
intermittent, rather than continuous, nebulizer
treatments.
14Case Nurse Staffing Ratios (3)
- Within 30 minutes, a second patient was
transferred from the ED with hemodynamic
instability from a massive pulmonary embolism.
Since the patient with COPD appeared to be
improving rapidly, and the other nurses were
caring for more critically ill patients, the same
nurse volunteered to admit the new patient.
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15Case Nurse Staffing Ratios (4)
- While the nurse was tending to orders for the new
admission, the COPD patient began urgently
insisting for help to get up to go the bathroom,
rather than using the bedpan. The nurse quickly
assisted the patient to the toilet and called for
a patient care assistant to transfer the patient
back to his hospital bed. The nurse then rushed
to the bedside of the acutely ill patient with
the pulmonary embolism.
16Case Nurse Staffing Ratios (5)
- Approximately 5 minutes later, the patient care
assistant arrived at the COPD patients toilet
and found him slumped on the floor in the
bathroom, with his oxygen detached from his face.
The patient was unresponsive and cyanotic. A code
blue was called. Despite extensive resuscitation
attempts, the previously stable ICU patient was
pronounced dead.
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17Unplanned Staffing Deficits
- Danger points for shortages are weekend shifts
and times of high ED census - Nurse unit leaders must anticipate changing
staffing needs and assess at least 4-8 hours
prior to next shift
See Notes for references.
18What Went Wrong?
- In the case presented, it appears that nursing
staff members were not supported to make
difficult decisions that would have protected the
patient and themselves - It also appears that the unit and hospital did
not have a back-up plan to fill positions left
empty by illness
19Empowering Staff Nurses
- It is vital that staff nurses on units have a
voice in staffing decisions and unit work flow - This is true both in developing the unit staffing
plans and in hour-by-hour decisions made on the
unit
See Notes for references.
20Responding to Last-Minute Staffing Changes
- Three resources should be in place
- Centralized staffing office to assist unit
leaders to adjust daily staffing - Shift coordinator who can adjust staffing across
units for each shift - Resource pool of RNs who can be flexible in their
working hours to adjust for slack times and busy
times
See Notes for references.
21Take-Home Points
- Best Practice Options for Nurse Staffing Ratios
Include - Conduct failure mode effect analysis on nurse
staffing for each unit to develop strategies for
when staffing levels are not adequate - Create an internal resource pool for flexibility
and census adjustments - Communicate all action plans to staff nurses on
unit as well as interdisciplinary and
administrative stakeholders
22Take-Home Points (2)
- Administer annual nurse satisfaction survey to
assess whether nurses find staffing plan safe and
adequate - Empower staff nurses to identify solutions for
staffing issues. Involve staff nurses in staffing
decisions made for budgetary purposes - Benchmark staffing ratios annually with other
facilities and correlate with data about patient
outcomes, adverse events, and root causes - Evaluate patient satisfaction feedback closely
and correlate with nurse staff plan
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