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Centralized Scheduling of Nursing Staff: A Rapid Review of the Literature.

Lisa MorseHillary DuncanLynette V ApenKarin ReeseCecelia L Crawford
Published in: Nursing administration quarterly (2024)
Case study reports describe improved labor productivity (ie. less overtime and less contracted labor), more consistently balanced staffing of frontline nursing professionals, less staff reassignment (ie, floating), and increased satisfaction and time savings for managers after transitioning to a centralized scheduling model. These findings were consistent with a computational, experimental study that found centralized scheduling resulted in less labor costs and fewer undesirable shifts from the frontline nurse's point of view compared to decentralized scheduling.
Keyphrases
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