The Road to Developing Standard Time for Efficient Nursing Care: A Time and Motion Analysis.
Modi Al-MoteriAmer A AlzahraniEnsherah Saeed AlthobitiVirginia PlummerAfnan Z SahrahMaha Jabar AlkhaldiEishah Fahad RajabAmani R AlsalmiMerhamah E AbdullahAfra Ezeldeen Abduelaal AbduelazeezMari-Zel M CaslangenMariam G IsmailTalal Awadh AlqurashiPublished in: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
(1) Background: The amount of time nurses spend with their patients is essential to improving the quality of patient care. Studies have shown that nurses spend a considerable amount of time on a variety of activities--which are often not taken into account while estimating nurse-to-patient care time allocation--that could potentially be eliminated, combined or delegated with greater productivity. The current study aimed to calculate standard time for each activity category by quantifying the amount of time required by nurses to complete an activity category and determine the adjustment time that can be given during work, as well as determine factors that can be altered to improve the efficiency of nursing care on inpatient general wards of a governmental hospital. (2) Method: A time and motion study was conducted over two weeks using 1-to-1 continuous observations of nurses as they performed their duties on inpatient general wards, while observers recorded each single activity, and specifically the time and movements required to complete those activities. (3) Result: There was 5100 min of observations over 10 working days. Nurses spent 69% (330 min) of time during their 8 h morning shift on direct patient care, (19.4%) ward/room activities (18%), documentation (14%), indirect patient care (12%) and professional communication (5%). Around 94 min of activities seem to be wasted and can be potentially detrimental to nurses' overall productivity and threaten patient care quality. The standard number of hours that represents the best estimate of a general ward nurse regarding the optimal speed at which the staff nurse can provide care related activities was computed and proposed. (4) Conclusions: The findings obtained from time-motion studies can help in developing more efficient and productive nursing work for more optimal care of patients.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- mental health
- end stage renal disease
- palliative care
- quality improvement
- primary care
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- climate change
- prognostic factors
- magnetic resonance imaging
- emergency department
- computed tomography
- high resolution
- acute care
- data analysis
- case control
- patient reported
- drug induced