Asleep on the job: Can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients?

Fatigue presents as an all-pervasive challenge to anyone who is engaged in shift work. While this affects all nurses, those who work on night duty have been shown to have the greatest risk of fatigue and cognitive impairment thus potentially posing a higher safety risk to themselves, the patients u...

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Main Authors: Jennifer Gamble, Paula Foran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australian College of Perioperative Nurses 2021-03-01
Series:Journal of Perioperative Nursing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.acorn.org.au/index.php/jpn/article/view/203
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author Jennifer Gamble
Paula Foran
author_facet Jennifer Gamble
Paula Foran
author_sort Jennifer Gamble
collection DOAJ
description Fatigue presents as an all-pervasive challenge to anyone who is engaged in shift work. While this affects all nurses, those who work on night duty have been shown to have the greatest risk of fatigue and cognitive impairment thus potentially posing a higher safety risk to themselves, the patients under their care and the wider community as nurses make their way home driving while drowsy. Despite robust evidence revealing the positive attributes of increased working abilities from napping on night duty, and the overall agreement by nurse managers and organisations, this practice has been slow to be introduced into nursing. Research revealed that 55 per cent of nurse managers felt the greatest barrier to implementation was the lack of policy and supervision around this practice. This discussion paper challenges nurses, managers and organisations to take note of current research, ACORN guidelines and work health and safety guidelines and start to change thinking and culture by looking at napping on night duty as a ‘safety’ implementation for staff, patients and the wider community. Policies and procedures should be developed and further research should be conducted into length and type of naps and subsequent positive and/or negative effects that may be reported by staff and health care facilities.
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spelling doaj-art-e99aad91f97d4e87a443f1980532d0022025-08-20T03:13:48ZengAustralian College of Perioperative NursesJournal of Perioperative Nursing2209-10842209-10922021-03-0134110.26550/2209-1092.1118Asleep on the job: Can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients?Jennifer GamblePaula Foran Fatigue presents as an all-pervasive challenge to anyone who is engaged in shift work. While this affects all nurses, those who work on night duty have been shown to have the greatest risk of fatigue and cognitive impairment thus potentially posing a higher safety risk to themselves, the patients under their care and the wider community as nurses make their way home driving while drowsy. Despite robust evidence revealing the positive attributes of increased working abilities from napping on night duty, and the overall agreement by nurse managers and organisations, this practice has been slow to be introduced into nursing. Research revealed that 55 per cent of nurse managers felt the greatest barrier to implementation was the lack of policy and supervision around this practice. This discussion paper challenges nurses, managers and organisations to take note of current research, ACORN guidelines and work health and safety guidelines and start to change thinking and culture by looking at napping on night duty as a ‘safety’ implementation for staff, patients and the wider community. Policies and procedures should be developed and further research should be conducted into length and type of naps and subsequent positive and/or negative effects that may be reported by staff and health care facilities. https://journal.acorn.org.au/index.php/jpn/article/view/203nappingfatiguenight-duty
spellingShingle Jennifer Gamble
Paula Foran
Asleep on the job: Can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients?
Journal of Perioperative Nursing
napping
fatigue
night-duty
title Asleep on the job: Can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients?
title_full Asleep on the job: Can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients?
title_fullStr Asleep on the job: Can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients?
title_full_unstemmed Asleep on the job: Can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients?
title_short Asleep on the job: Can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients?
title_sort asleep on the job can night shift napping provide greater safety for both staff and patients
topic napping
fatigue
night-duty
url https://journal.acorn.org.au/index.php/jpn/article/view/203
work_keys_str_mv AT jennifergamble asleeponthejobcannightshiftnappingprovidegreatersafetyforbothstaffandpatients
AT paulaforan asleeponthejobcannightshiftnappingprovidegreatersafetyforbothstaffandpatients