CE: Original Research: Napping on the Night Shift: A Two-Hospital Implementation Project.

Am J Nurs

Jeanne Geiger-Brown is founding dean of the School of Health Professions at Stevenson University, Stevenson, MD. At the time of this study, she was an associate professor in the Department of Family and Community Health at the University of Maryland School of Nursing in Baltimore, where Knar Sagherian is a doctoral candidate and Shijun Zhu is an assistant professor in the Department of Organizational Systems and Adult Health. Margaret Ann Wieroniey is a pediatric intensive care nurse at Children's National Medical Center in Washington, DC, where Lori Blair is nursing administrative manager of central staffing operations and Rose Szeles is director of nursing for the hematology, oncology, and bone marrow transplant programs. At the time of the study, Joan Warren, now retired, was the director of nursing research and Magnet at MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center in Baltimore. Pamela S. Hinds is director of the Department of Nursing Research and Quality Outcomes and associate director of the Center for Translational Science at Children's National Health System in Washington, DC, as well as a professor of pediatrics at the George Washington University. This study was supported by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (grant number R21OH009979). Contact author: Jeanne Geiger-Brown, The authors and planners have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.

Published: May 2016

Background: Nurses who work the night shift often experience high levels of sleepiness. Napping has been adopted as an effective countermeasure to sleepiness and fatigue in other safety-sensitive industries, but has not had widespread acceptance in nursing.

Purpose: To assess the barriers to successful implementation of night-shift naps and to describe the nap experiences of night-shift nurses who took naps.

Methods: In this two-hospital pilot implementation project, napping on the night shift was offered to six nursing units for which the executive nursing leadership had given approval. Unit nurse managers' approval was sought, and where granted, further explanation was given to the unit's staff nurses. A nap experience form, which included the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale, was used to assess pre-nap sleepiness level, nap duration and perceived sleep experience, post-nap sleep inertia, and the perceived helpfulness of the nap. Nurse managers and staff nurses were also interviewed at the end of the three-month study period.

Results: Successful implementation occurred on only one of the six units, with partial success seen on a second unit. Barriers primarily occurred at the point of seeking the unit nurse managers' approval. On the successful unit, 153 30-minutes naps were taken during the study period. A high level of sleepiness was present at the beginning of 44% of the naps. For more than half the naps, nurses reported achieving either light (43%) or deep (14%) sleep. Sleep inertia was rare. The average score of helpfulness of napping was high (7.3 on a 1-to-10 scale). Nurses who napped reported being less drowsy while driving home after their shift.

Conclusion: These data suggest that when barriers to napping are overcome, napping on the night shift is feasible and can reduce nurses' workplace sleepiness and drowsy driving on the way home. Addressing nurse managers' perceptions of and concerns about napping may be essential to successful implementation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4889223PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.NAJ.0000482953.88608.80DOI Listing

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