Increase quality care with staff
involvement with workload
assignment
Roberto Rivera-Olmo
NU420: Leadership and management in the changing health care environment
Barbara Findley
July 30th, 2015
Research findings
 Each additional patient a nurse care for increases the the
“likelihood of dying within 30 days of admission” and
increase failure to rescue odds by 7%, as well as increase
the odds of burnout by 23% and causing in increase of
job dissatisfaction by 15% (Aiken, Clarke, Sloane,
Sochalski, & Silber, 2002).
 Higher nurse to patient ratios have a significant
association with lower quality of care, increase in patient
exposer to avoidable adverse outcomes and healthcare
cost (Stanton, 2004).
Staff and quality findings
 Study findings show that nursing workload is affected by
“factors other than the patient’s clinical condition”
(Carayon & Gurses, 2008).
 Increasing registered nurses while decreasing unlicensed
staff by requiring nurses to take on more responsibilities
while having a slight decrease of patients to care for does
not improve patient satisfaction or quality of care
(Martin, 2015).
 Current nursing assignments are based upon a patient
acuity/classification scores or nursing care hours.
High workload
Cost of high workload
 In a literature review study on nursing turnover costs and rates,
Li and Jones found reported turnover rates “ranging from a
low of 9.49% to a high of 250%”, dependent on hospital
retention practices and staffing (2013). A report from The
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation found estimated
replacement cost per RN at about $22,000 to $64,000 (2007),
with cost being higher for new nurse turnover due to the higher
level of orientation involvement required.
 As staff are required to take care of more patients increase
chances of in hospital traumas like falls and quality of care
indicators like pressure ulcers. Falls can cost as high as $86,00
per incident and ulcers cost the US $11 billion (Gallagher).
Workload factors
 Nursing care hours do not differentiate for nurses and
unlicensed staff, nor for the different levels of acuity. Use of
NCH for workload factoring may allow incomplete patient care
to occur (Marquis & Huston, p. 385).
 Patient classification systems assist making nursing assignment
by classifying patients into a acuity level to determine the right
amount and mix of nursing and unlicensed staff (Marquis &
Huston, p. 385).
 Although PCS allows for a better assessment of staffing needs
than NCH, it only factors in the clinical aspect of the patient
and does not address other factors that may take addition time
from staff to provide to other patients, thus reducing quality of
care.
Workload factors
 Factors to consider when making assignments include
care areas like feeding, activities of daily living, and
general health. Other factors that need to be considered
in staffing assignment is required treatment, treatment
complexity, medication and there route of administration.
 Other factors that should be considered in workload
assignment due to time consumption are factors like
infection control (time of PPE donning and removal),
anticipatory interventions from disease process, cognitive
workload (intellectual information processing),
admission/discharge paperwork, and family support
(Connor, LaGrasta & Hickey, 2015).
Department based
staffing
 Due to the complexity of healthcare and the uniqueness
of each department and unit, department based staffing
and workload measurement tools implementation is more
beneficial than hospital wide-blanket staffing and
workload measurement tool implantation. Departmental
based staffing can be logistically implemented by having
unit/departmental nursing committees for workload
measurement tool creation and implementation.
Workload measurement
panels
 Departmental staff nurses may form a panel to discuss
unit based patient population complexity. Each panel can
be include experienced bedside nurses, charge nurses,
clinical nurse specialist, clinical coordinators and other
nursing staff (Connor, LaGrasta & Hickey, 2015).
.
Appropriate staffing
 By developing workload measurement tools for that are
specific to patient population complexities per unit,
staffing can be provided accordingly to anticipated
workload factors. This method would save each
department money while addressing adequate staffing
unlike a hospital wide staffing ratio with the required staff
which would understaff some units and over staff others.
 Unit based measurement tools can identify the required
need of nurse to patient and axillary staff to
patient/nurse. In units where patients are more self
reliable, the use of axillary units would be less, while more
complex patient population units would require small
nurse to patient and axillary staff to patient ratios.
Quality care from appropriate
staff workload
 As nurses and unlicensed staff are staffed to appropriate
workload, patient’s quality of care can improve due to
improved safety, decrease waiting times and increased
health care deliverance.
Cost savings
 Insuring quality of care improvements while keeping
expenditures low is important to any health care facility
success. By using available staff to create unit based
workload measurement tools, health care facilities remove
the need to hire outside consultants. Along with quality
improvement, the reduction of nursing turnover due to
understaffing can save the hospital hundreds of
thousands of dollars annually.
 Improving quality of care measures also saves health care
facilities money by anticipating issues (e.g. falls) common
to unit based patient population complexities and staffing
accordingly to prevent these issues from occurring.
Implementation
Attractiveness
 Health care facilities that can improve the quality of care
for patients, increase nursing retention, reduce nursing
turnover, and safe money, all by staffing to a safe
workload becomes an desired place for patients to seek
treatment and professionals (unlicensed staff, nurses and
providers) to seek employment.
References
 Aiken, L. H., Clarke, S. P., Sloane, D. M., Sochalski, J., Silber, J. H.
(2002). Hospital nurse staffing and patient mortality, nurse burnout, and job
dissatisfaction (p. 1987-1993). Journal of the American Medical
Association.
 Carayon, P. & Gurses, A. P. (2008). Nursing workload and patient safety: A
human factors engineering perspective (Ch. 30). Patient safety and quality:
An evidence-based handbook for nurses. Retrieved from
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2657/#ch30.r25
 Connor, J. A., LaGrasta, C. & Hickey, P. A. (2015). Complexity
assessment and monitoring to ensure optimal outcomes tool for measuring pediatric
critical care nursing (p. 297-308). American journal of critical care.
 Gallagher, L. G. (2011). The high cost of poor care: The financial case for
prevention in American nursing homes. The national consumer voice
for quality long-term care. Washington, DC.
 Martin, C. J. (2015). The effects of nurse staffing on quality of care (p. 4-
6). Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses.
 Marquis, B. L. & Huston, C. J. (2012). Staffing needs and scheduling
policies (p. 385). Leadership roles and management functions in
nursing: Theory and application (7th ed). Lippincott Williams &
Wilkins, Philadelphia, PA.
 Li, Y. & Jones, C. B. (2013). A literature review of nursing turnover cost
(p. 405-418). Journal of nursing management.
 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (2007). Assessing the direct costs
of RN turnover. Evaluation of the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation wisdom at work initiative. Retrieved from
www.rwjf.org/content/dam/files/legacy-files/article-
files/2/revlewinevalrnturnover.pdf
 Stanton, M. W. (2004). Hospital nurse staffing and quality of care (p.
7). Agency for healthcare research and quality: Research in action.

More Related Content

PPTX
Quality of care improvement by changes to workload assignment for safe staffing
PPTX
Registered Nurse Staffing Legislation: Why registered nurse staffing benefits...
DOCX
Mandatory Nurse Patient Staffing Ratio
PPT
Staffing & infections
PPT
Safe staffing = safe care the role of nurse-patient ratios
PDF
EBP Bedside Handoff and Patient Satisfaction
PPTX
Bedside reporting
PDF
Capstone Poster jo final
Quality of care improvement by changes to workload assignment for safe staffing
Registered Nurse Staffing Legislation: Why registered nurse staffing benefits...
Mandatory Nurse Patient Staffing Ratio
Staffing & infections
Safe staffing = safe care the role of nurse-patient ratios
EBP Bedside Handoff and Patient Satisfaction
Bedside reporting
Capstone Poster jo final

What's hot (20)

PPTX
bedside reporting
PPT
2457 ppt bedside report (2)
PDF
RCN%20Guidance%20for%20nurse%20staffing%20in%20Critical%20care
PDF
patient safety and quality
PPT
Gates Fallslit R
PPTX
Patient acuity
PDF
Quality of nursing service in bpkihs
PPTX
bedside reporting
PPT
Chapter15
PPTX
Fall Prevention (1)
PDF
2011 04 Sargen Hooker Cooper Gaps In Physician Supply
PPT
Acute and critical care, IN NURSING, MANAGEMENT OF CLIENT IN ICU.
PPTX
aaa
PPTX
preventing unplanned extubations
PDF
Joint Commission- SBAR Pt2- Dec10 copy
PDF
Acs0109 Fast Track Inpatient And Ambulatory Surgery
PDF
Knowledge and Practice of Documentation among Nurses in Ahmadu Bello Universi...
PPTX
Quality of care
bedside reporting
2457 ppt bedside report (2)
RCN%20Guidance%20for%20nurse%20staffing%20in%20Critical%20care
patient safety and quality
Gates Fallslit R
Patient acuity
Quality of nursing service in bpkihs
bedside reporting
Chapter15
Fall Prevention (1)
2011 04 Sargen Hooker Cooper Gaps In Physician Supply
Acute and critical care, IN NURSING, MANAGEMENT OF CLIENT IN ICU.
aaa
preventing unplanned extubations
Joint Commission- SBAR Pt2- Dec10 copy
Acs0109 Fast Track Inpatient And Ambulatory Surgery
Knowledge and Practice of Documentation among Nurses in Ahmadu Bello Universi...
Quality of care
Ad

Viewers also liked (17)

PDF
Troublemaker
PPTX
How to Avoid TROUBLE: Legal Ethics for In House Counsel Featuring Larry Tucker
PPTX
Vc #2
PPT
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Executive Nurse Fellows Program
PDF
ERN NCRA AAHAM NoCal UCR Legislative Update.5.14.10
PPSX
ARNBC Perspective
PPTX
Make Your Voice Heard: A Beginner's Guide to Lobbying (Advocating) to Congres...
PPT
Organizational Policy and Systems Change
PDF
Driving APRN Policy: A Legislative Success
PPT
Nurses and political action
PPTX
Health system resilience, way forward and role of nurses
PPTX
Change challenges for nurses 2
PPTX
Nursing Leaders influencing politics and acting as patient advocates
PPTX
Care of Sickle Cell Disease Patients: Process Improvement & Change with Nurses
PPTX
PPT
Using Arterial Pressure Based Cardiac Output to Guide Therapy - Chris Saraceno
PPT
Nursing Informatics and Healthcare Policy
Troublemaker
How to Avoid TROUBLE: Legal Ethics for In House Counsel Featuring Larry Tucker
Vc #2
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Executive Nurse Fellows Program
ERN NCRA AAHAM NoCal UCR Legislative Update.5.14.10
ARNBC Perspective
Make Your Voice Heard: A Beginner's Guide to Lobbying (Advocating) to Congres...
Organizational Policy and Systems Change
Driving APRN Policy: A Legislative Success
Nurses and political action
Health system resilience, way forward and role of nurses
Change challenges for nurses 2
Nursing Leaders influencing politics and acting as patient advocates
Care of Sickle Cell Disease Patients: Process Improvement & Change with Nurses
Using Arterial Pressure Based Cardiac Output to Guide Therapy - Chris Saraceno
Nursing Informatics and Healthcare Policy
Ad

Similar to Increase quality care with staff involvement with workload assignment (20)

PPT
NA 2 Organizing pateint care care edited.ppt
DOCX
The domino effect of staffing for what is rather than what if
DOCX
Many healthcare financial decisions have a direct effect on nursin.docx
PDF
Adding it Up - Accounting for the Transformational Power of an Optimized Work...
PPTX
MANAGING PATIENT CARE
 
PPTX
methods os patient assignment
PPTX
Managing patient care
PDF
HFMA Article: 5 Signs That You Can Reduce Staffing Costs and Boost Nurse Sati...
PDF
The Top 3 Benefits of Acuity-Based Staffing for Your Organization
PPTX
ORGANISING-THE-PATIENT-CARE in nursing management
DOCX
Nursing administration
PDF
Final report quality of nursing service in bpkihs
PPTX
How many more staff do you need to improve the quality of care?
PPTX
Organizing nursing services and patient care
PPTX
SEMINAR ON METHODS OF PATIENT ASSIGNMENT
PPTX
Strategies for advanced nursing practice
PPTX
Staffing and Budgetting
PPTX
PATIENT ASSIGNMENT..................pptx
DOCX
I need 120 words for each question. Please ensure to post individual.docx
DOCX
Comment 1Development of an evidence-based practice project mus
NA 2 Organizing pateint care care edited.ppt
The domino effect of staffing for what is rather than what if
Many healthcare financial decisions have a direct effect on nursin.docx
Adding it Up - Accounting for the Transformational Power of an Optimized Work...
MANAGING PATIENT CARE
 
methods os patient assignment
Managing patient care
HFMA Article: 5 Signs That You Can Reduce Staffing Costs and Boost Nurse Sati...
The Top 3 Benefits of Acuity-Based Staffing for Your Organization
ORGANISING-THE-PATIENT-CARE in nursing management
Nursing administration
Final report quality of nursing service in bpkihs
How many more staff do you need to improve the quality of care?
Organizing nursing services and patient care
SEMINAR ON METHODS OF PATIENT ASSIGNMENT
Strategies for advanced nursing practice
Staffing and Budgetting
PATIENT ASSIGNMENT..................pptx
I need 120 words for each question. Please ensure to post individual.docx
Comment 1Development of an evidence-based practice project mus

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
AUTOIMMUNITY - Note for Second Year Pharm D Students
PPTX
Neuropsychological Rehabilitation of Organic Brain Disorders
PDF
Culturally Sensitive Health Solutions: Engineering Localized Practices (www....
PPTX
Routine care of newborn presentation .pptx
PPTX
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 17
PPTX
Full Slide Deck - SY CF Talk Adelaide 10June.pptx
PPT
Perioperative Nursing Care 1st bsc nursing.ppt
DOCX
PT10 continues to explose your mind right after reading
PPTX
MEDICAL NURSING. Endocrine Disorder.pptx
PPTX
Acute renal failure.pptx for BNs 2nd year
PDF
Fundamentals Final Review Questions.docx.pdf
PDF
health promotion and maintenance of elderly
PPTX
FOOD IN RELATION TO NUTRITION AND HEALTH
PPTX
1. FAMILY PLANNING-1-2, nursing students
PPTX
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 18
PPT
12.08.2025 Dr. Amrita Ghosh_Stocks Standards_ Smart_Inventory Management_GCLP...
PPTX
ANALGESIC AND ANTI-INFLAMMssssssATORY DRUGS.pptx
PPTX
A med nursing, GRP 4-SIKLE CELL DISEASE IN MEDICAL NURSING
PPTX
Wound care MNEMONICS MNEMONICS health care
PDF
mycobacterial infection tuberculosis (TB)
AUTOIMMUNITY - Note for Second Year Pharm D Students
Neuropsychological Rehabilitation of Organic Brain Disorders
Culturally Sensitive Health Solutions: Engineering Localized Practices (www....
Routine care of newborn presentation .pptx
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 17
Full Slide Deck - SY CF Talk Adelaide 10June.pptx
Perioperative Nursing Care 1st bsc nursing.ppt
PT10 continues to explose your mind right after reading
MEDICAL NURSING. Endocrine Disorder.pptx
Acute renal failure.pptx for BNs 2nd year
Fundamentals Final Review Questions.docx.pdf
health promotion and maintenance of elderly
FOOD IN RELATION TO NUTRITION AND HEALTH
1. FAMILY PLANNING-1-2, nursing students
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 18
12.08.2025 Dr. Amrita Ghosh_Stocks Standards_ Smart_Inventory Management_GCLP...
ANALGESIC AND ANTI-INFLAMMssssssATORY DRUGS.pptx
A med nursing, GRP 4-SIKLE CELL DISEASE IN MEDICAL NURSING
Wound care MNEMONICS MNEMONICS health care
mycobacterial infection tuberculosis (TB)

Increase quality care with staff involvement with workload assignment

  • 1. Increase quality care with staff involvement with workload assignment Roberto Rivera-Olmo NU420: Leadership and management in the changing health care environment Barbara Findley July 30th, 2015
  • 2. Research findings  Each additional patient a nurse care for increases the the “likelihood of dying within 30 days of admission” and increase failure to rescue odds by 7%, as well as increase the odds of burnout by 23% and causing in increase of job dissatisfaction by 15% (Aiken, Clarke, Sloane, Sochalski, & Silber, 2002).  Higher nurse to patient ratios have a significant association with lower quality of care, increase in patient exposer to avoidable adverse outcomes and healthcare cost (Stanton, 2004).
  • 3. Staff and quality findings  Study findings show that nursing workload is affected by “factors other than the patient’s clinical condition” (Carayon & Gurses, 2008).  Increasing registered nurses while decreasing unlicensed staff by requiring nurses to take on more responsibilities while having a slight decrease of patients to care for does not improve patient satisfaction or quality of care (Martin, 2015).  Current nursing assignments are based upon a patient acuity/classification scores or nursing care hours.
  • 5. Cost of high workload  In a literature review study on nursing turnover costs and rates, Li and Jones found reported turnover rates “ranging from a low of 9.49% to a high of 250%”, dependent on hospital retention practices and staffing (2013). A report from The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation found estimated replacement cost per RN at about $22,000 to $64,000 (2007), with cost being higher for new nurse turnover due to the higher level of orientation involvement required.  As staff are required to take care of more patients increase chances of in hospital traumas like falls and quality of care indicators like pressure ulcers. Falls can cost as high as $86,00 per incident and ulcers cost the US $11 billion (Gallagher).
  • 6. Workload factors  Nursing care hours do not differentiate for nurses and unlicensed staff, nor for the different levels of acuity. Use of NCH for workload factoring may allow incomplete patient care to occur (Marquis & Huston, p. 385).  Patient classification systems assist making nursing assignment by classifying patients into a acuity level to determine the right amount and mix of nursing and unlicensed staff (Marquis & Huston, p. 385).  Although PCS allows for a better assessment of staffing needs than NCH, it only factors in the clinical aspect of the patient and does not address other factors that may take addition time from staff to provide to other patients, thus reducing quality of care.
  • 7. Workload factors  Factors to consider when making assignments include care areas like feeding, activities of daily living, and general health. Other factors that need to be considered in staffing assignment is required treatment, treatment complexity, medication and there route of administration.  Other factors that should be considered in workload assignment due to time consumption are factors like infection control (time of PPE donning and removal), anticipatory interventions from disease process, cognitive workload (intellectual information processing), admission/discharge paperwork, and family support (Connor, LaGrasta & Hickey, 2015).
  • 8. Department based staffing  Due to the complexity of healthcare and the uniqueness of each department and unit, department based staffing and workload measurement tools implementation is more beneficial than hospital wide-blanket staffing and workload measurement tool implantation. Departmental based staffing can be logistically implemented by having unit/departmental nursing committees for workload measurement tool creation and implementation.
  • 9. Workload measurement panels  Departmental staff nurses may form a panel to discuss unit based patient population complexity. Each panel can be include experienced bedside nurses, charge nurses, clinical nurse specialist, clinical coordinators and other nursing staff (Connor, LaGrasta & Hickey, 2015). .
  • 10. Appropriate staffing  By developing workload measurement tools for that are specific to patient population complexities per unit, staffing can be provided accordingly to anticipated workload factors. This method would save each department money while addressing adequate staffing unlike a hospital wide staffing ratio with the required staff which would understaff some units and over staff others.  Unit based measurement tools can identify the required need of nurse to patient and axillary staff to patient/nurse. In units where patients are more self reliable, the use of axillary units would be less, while more complex patient population units would require small nurse to patient and axillary staff to patient ratios.
  • 11. Quality care from appropriate staff workload  As nurses and unlicensed staff are staffed to appropriate workload, patient’s quality of care can improve due to improved safety, decrease waiting times and increased health care deliverance.
  • 12. Cost savings  Insuring quality of care improvements while keeping expenditures low is important to any health care facility success. By using available staff to create unit based workload measurement tools, health care facilities remove the need to hire outside consultants. Along with quality improvement, the reduction of nursing turnover due to understaffing can save the hospital hundreds of thousands of dollars annually.  Improving quality of care measures also saves health care facilities money by anticipating issues (e.g. falls) common to unit based patient population complexities and staffing accordingly to prevent these issues from occurring.
  • 14. Attractiveness  Health care facilities that can improve the quality of care for patients, increase nursing retention, reduce nursing turnover, and safe money, all by staffing to a safe workload becomes an desired place for patients to seek treatment and professionals (unlicensed staff, nurses and providers) to seek employment.
  • 15. References  Aiken, L. H., Clarke, S. P., Sloane, D. M., Sochalski, J., Silber, J. H. (2002). Hospital nurse staffing and patient mortality, nurse burnout, and job dissatisfaction (p. 1987-1993). Journal of the American Medical Association.  Carayon, P. & Gurses, A. P. (2008). Nursing workload and patient safety: A human factors engineering perspective (Ch. 30). Patient safety and quality: An evidence-based handbook for nurses. Retrieved from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2657/#ch30.r25  Connor, J. A., LaGrasta, C. & Hickey, P. A. (2015). Complexity assessment and monitoring to ensure optimal outcomes tool for measuring pediatric critical care nursing (p. 297-308). American journal of critical care.
  • 16.  Gallagher, L. G. (2011). The high cost of poor care: The financial case for prevention in American nursing homes. The national consumer voice for quality long-term care. Washington, DC.  Martin, C. J. (2015). The effects of nurse staffing on quality of care (p. 4- 6). Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses.  Marquis, B. L. & Huston, C. J. (2012). Staffing needs and scheduling policies (p. 385). Leadership roles and management functions in nursing: Theory and application (7th ed). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia, PA.  Li, Y. & Jones, C. B. (2013). A literature review of nursing turnover cost (p. 405-418). Journal of nursing management.
  • 17.  Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (2007). Assessing the direct costs of RN turnover. Evaluation of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation wisdom at work initiative. Retrieved from www.rwjf.org/content/dam/files/legacy-files/article- files/2/revlewinevalrnturnover.pdf  Stanton, M. W. (2004). Hospital nurse staffing and quality of care (p. 7). Agency for healthcare research and quality: Research in action.