Healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature review

Abstract Background A number of working time arrangements have been linked to negative consequences for both health personnel and their patients. A common hypothesis put forth to explain these findings suggests that certain working time arrangements lead to negative patient consequences due to the a...

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Main Authors: Vilde H. Bernstrøm, Daniele Evelin Alves, Dag Ellingsen, Mari Holm Ingelsrud
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-03-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-3993-5
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spelling doaj-03d0a22d20804171b83c44a4a86b132d2020-11-25T02:20:18ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632019-03-0119111310.1186/s12913-019-3993-5Healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature reviewVilde H. Bernstrøm0Daniele Evelin Alves1Dag Ellingsen2Mari Holm Ingelsrud3OsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan University, Work Research InstituteOsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan University, Work Research InstituteOsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan University, Work Research InstituteOsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan University, Work Research InstituteAbstract Background A number of working time arrangements have been linked to negative consequences for both health personnel and their patients. A common hypothesis put forth to explain these findings suggests that certain working time arrangements lead to negative patient consequences due to the adverse impact they have on employee health. The purpose of this study is to use systematic reviews to investigate whether employee health explains the relationship between working time arrangements and patient safety. Methods A systematic literature review was performed including published reviews and original studies from MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Cinahl and Web of Science investigating working time arrangements for healthcare personnel, employee health and patient safety. In addition, we screened reference lists of identified reviews. Two reviewers independently identified relevant publications according to inclusion criteria, extracted findings and assessed quality. Results Six thousand nine hundred thirty papers were identified, of which 52 studies met our criteria. Articles were categorized into five groups according to how they approached the research question: 1) independent analyses of relationship between working time arrangements and employee health, and of working time arrangements and patient safety (5 studies); 2) relationship between working time arrangements on both employee health and patient safety (21 studies); 3) working time arrangements and employee health as two explanatory variables for patient safety (8 studies); 4) combinations of the above analyses (7 studies); 5) other relevant studies (5 studies). Studies that find that working time is detrimental to employee health, generally also find detrimental results for patient safety. This is particularly shown through increases in errors by health personnel. When controlling for employee health, the relationship between working time arrangements and patient safety is reduced, but still significant. Conclusions Results suggest that employee health partially (but not completely) mediates the relationship between working time arrangements and patient safety. However, there is a lack of studies directly investigating employee health as a mediator between working time arrangements and patient safety. Future studies should address this research gap.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-3993-5Working timeShift workHealthPatient safetyHealth sectorSystematic review
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vilde H. Bernstrøm
Daniele Evelin Alves
Dag Ellingsen
Mari Holm Ingelsrud
spellingShingle Vilde H. Bernstrøm
Daniele Evelin Alves
Dag Ellingsen
Mari Holm Ingelsrud
Healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature review
BMC Health Services Research
Working time
Shift work
Health
Patient safety
Health sector
Systematic review
author_facet Vilde H. Bernstrøm
Daniele Evelin Alves
Dag Ellingsen
Mari Holm Ingelsrud
author_sort Vilde H. Bernstrøm
title Healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature review
title_short Healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature review
title_full Healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature review
title_fullStr Healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature review
title_full_unstemmed Healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature review
title_sort healthy working time arrangements for healthcare personnel and patients: a systematic literature review
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Abstract Background A number of working time arrangements have been linked to negative consequences for both health personnel and their patients. A common hypothesis put forth to explain these findings suggests that certain working time arrangements lead to negative patient consequences due to the adverse impact they have on employee health. The purpose of this study is to use systematic reviews to investigate whether employee health explains the relationship between working time arrangements and patient safety. Methods A systematic literature review was performed including published reviews and original studies from MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Cinahl and Web of Science investigating working time arrangements for healthcare personnel, employee health and patient safety. In addition, we screened reference lists of identified reviews. Two reviewers independently identified relevant publications according to inclusion criteria, extracted findings and assessed quality. Results Six thousand nine hundred thirty papers were identified, of which 52 studies met our criteria. Articles were categorized into five groups according to how they approached the research question: 1) independent analyses of relationship between working time arrangements and employee health, and of working time arrangements and patient safety (5 studies); 2) relationship between working time arrangements on both employee health and patient safety (21 studies); 3) working time arrangements and employee health as two explanatory variables for patient safety (8 studies); 4) combinations of the above analyses (7 studies); 5) other relevant studies (5 studies). Studies that find that working time is detrimental to employee health, generally also find detrimental results for patient safety. This is particularly shown through increases in errors by health personnel. When controlling for employee health, the relationship between working time arrangements and patient safety is reduced, but still significant. Conclusions Results suggest that employee health partially (but not completely) mediates the relationship between working time arrangements and patient safety. However, there is a lack of studies directly investigating employee health as a mediator between working time arrangements and patient safety. Future studies should address this research gap.
topic Working time
Shift work
Health
Patient safety
Health sector
Systematic review
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-019-3993-5
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