Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries
Aiken LH, Sermeus W, McKee M, Lasater KB, Sloane D, Pogue CA, Kohnen D, Dello S, Maier CB, Drennan J, McHugh MD (2024)
BMJ Open 14(2): e079931.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
Download
e079931.full.pdf
835.70 KB
Autor*in
Aiken, Linda H;
Sermeus, Walter;
McKee, Martin;
Lasater, Karen B;
Sloane, Douglas;
Pogue, Colleen A;
Kohnen, Dorothea;
Dello, Simon;
Maier, Claudia BettinaUniBi ;
Drennan, Jonathan;
McHugh, Matthew D
Abstract / Bemerkung
**Objectives**
To determine the well-being of physicians and nurses in hospital practice in Europe, and to identify interventions that hold promise for reducing adverse clinician outcomes and improving patient safety. **Design**
Baseline cross-sectional survey of 2187 physicians and 6643 nurses practicing in 64 hospitals in six European countries participating in the EU-funded Magnet4Europe intervention to improve clinicians’ well-being. **Setting**
Acute general hospitals with 150 or more beds in six European countries: Belgium, England, Germany, Ireland, Sweden and Norway. **Participants**
Physicians and nurses with direct patient contact working in adult medical and surgical inpatient units, including intensive care and emergency departments. **Main outcome measures**
Burnout, job dissatisfaction, physical and mental health, intent to leave job, quality of care and patient safety and interventions clinicians believe would improve their well-being. **Results**
Poor work/life balance (57% physicians, 40% nurses), intent to leave (29% physicians, 33% nurses) and high burnout (25% physicians, 26% nurses) were prevalent. Rates varied by hospitals within countries and between countries. Better work environments and staffing were associated with lower percentages of clinicians reporting unfavourable health indicators, quality of care and patient safety. The effect of a 1 IQR improvement in work environments was associated with 7.2% fewer physicians and 5.3% fewer nurses reporting high burnout, and 14.2% fewer physicians and 8.6% fewer nurses giving their hospital an unfavourable rating of quality of care. Improving nurse staffing levels (79% nurses) and reducing bureaucracy and red tape (44% physicians) were interventions clinicians reported would be most effective in improving their own well-being, whereas individual mental health interventions were less frequently prioritised. **Conclusions**
Burnout, mental health morbidities, job dissatisfaction and concerns about patient safety and care quality are prevalent among European hospital physicians and nurses. Interventions to improve hospital work environments and staffing are more important to clinicians than mental health interventions to improve personal resilience.
To determine the well-being of physicians and nurses in hospital practice in Europe, and to identify interventions that hold promise for reducing adverse clinician outcomes and improving patient safety. **Design**
Baseline cross-sectional survey of 2187 physicians and 6643 nurses practicing in 64 hospitals in six European countries participating in the EU-funded Magnet4Europe intervention to improve clinicians’ well-being. **Setting**
Acute general hospitals with 150 or more beds in six European countries: Belgium, England, Germany, Ireland, Sweden and Norway. **Participants**
Physicians and nurses with direct patient contact working in adult medical and surgical inpatient units, including intensive care and emergency departments. **Main outcome measures**
Burnout, job dissatisfaction, physical and mental health, intent to leave job, quality of care and patient safety and interventions clinicians believe would improve their well-being. **Results**
Poor work/life balance (57% physicians, 40% nurses), intent to leave (29% physicians, 33% nurses) and high burnout (25% physicians, 26% nurses) were prevalent. Rates varied by hospitals within countries and between countries. Better work environments and staffing were associated with lower percentages of clinicians reporting unfavourable health indicators, quality of care and patient safety. The effect of a 1 IQR improvement in work environments was associated with 7.2% fewer physicians and 5.3% fewer nurses reporting high burnout, and 14.2% fewer physicians and 8.6% fewer nurses giving their hospital an unfavourable rating of quality of care. Improving nurse staffing levels (79% nurses) and reducing bureaucracy and red tape (44% physicians) were interventions clinicians reported would be most effective in improving their own well-being, whereas individual mental health interventions were less frequently prioritised. **Conclusions**
Burnout, mental health morbidities, job dissatisfaction and concerns about patient safety and care quality are prevalent among European hospital physicians and nurses. Interventions to improve hospital work environments and staffing are more important to clinicians than mental health interventions to improve personal resilience.
Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Zeitschriftentitel
BMJ Open
Band
14
Ausgabe
2
Art.-Nr.
e079931
Urheberrecht / Lizenzen
ISSN
2044-6055
eISSN
2044-6055
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2986972
Zitieren
Aiken LH, Sermeus W, McKee M, et al. Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries. BMJ Open. 2024;14(2): e079931.
Aiken, L. H., Sermeus, W., McKee, M., Lasater, K. B., Sloane, D., Pogue, C. A., Kohnen, D., et al. (2024). Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries. BMJ Open, 14(2), e079931. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-079931
Aiken, Linda H, Sermeus, Walter, McKee, Martin, Lasater, Karen B, Sloane, Douglas, Pogue, Colleen A, Kohnen, Dorothea, et al. 2024. “Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries”. BMJ Open 14 (2): e079931.
Aiken, L. H., Sermeus, W., McKee, M., Lasater, K. B., Sloane, D., Pogue, C. A., Kohnen, D., Dello, S., Maier, C. B., Drennan, J., et al. (2024). Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries. BMJ Open 14:e079931.
Aiken, L.H., et al., 2024. Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries. BMJ Open, 14(2): e079931.
L.H. Aiken, et al., “Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries”, BMJ Open, vol. 14, 2024, : e079931.
Aiken, L.H., Sermeus, W., McKee, M., Lasater, K.B., Sloane, D., Pogue, C.A., Kohnen, D., Dello, S., Maier, C.B., Drennan, J., McHugh, M.D.: Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries. BMJ Open. 14, : e079931 (2024).
Aiken, Linda H, Sermeus, Walter, McKee, Martin, Lasater, Karen B, Sloane, Douglas, Pogue, Colleen A, Kohnen, Dorothea, Dello, Simon, Maier, Claudia Bettina, Drennan, Jonathan, and McHugh, Matthew D. “Physician and nurse well-being, patient safety and recommendations for interventions: cross-sectional survey in hospitals in six European countries”. BMJ Open 14.2 (2024): e079931.
Alle Dateien verfügbar unter der/den folgenden Lizenz(en):
Creative Commons Namensnennung-Nicht kommerziell 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0):
Volltext(e)
Name
e079931.full.pdf
835.70 KB
Access Level
Open Access
Zuletzt Hochgeladen
2024-02-13T07:00:42Z
MD5 Prüfsumme
c7e1cd768be7e88c28a673bad76050bf
Link(s) zu Volltext(en)
Access Level
Open Access
Daten bereitgestellt von European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI)
Zitationen in Europe PMC
Daten bereitgestellt von Europe PubMed Central.
References
Daten bereitgestellt von Europe PubMed Central.
Export
Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen
Web of Science
Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®Quellen
PMID: 38346890
PubMed | Europe PMC
Suchen in