High workload and unpredictable shift end times can contribute to employee turnover, dissatisfaction, and low staff engagement. The aim of this project was to improve nurse and patient satisfaction within a hospital-based outpatient gastrointestinal endoscopy unit while moving from an existing three-shift procedure staffing model to a two-shift model with defined expectations and predictable shift end times. The shift modification led to an 82% decrease in nurse turnover rates after the first 6 months. There was a 12% decrease in the number of nurses calling in ill to work. Nurse satisfaction, compared to 2 years prior, demonstrated 21% improvement related to "having a sense of achievement"; 39% improvement with "being involved in work unit decisions"; 62% decrease in burnout; and 7% improvement in overall satisfaction. The number of nurses attending and presenting at national, regional, and local conferences increased. Furthermore, overall unit patient satisfaction improved by 1.94% (p = .063) between first-quarter 2014 preimplementation data (n = 183) and first-quarter 2015 postimplementation survey data (n = 140). The created shared governance environment supported nurses' involvement in decision-making and creating a new shift model that led to greater staff and patient satisfaction.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SGA.0000000000000446 | DOI Listing |
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