Consequences, costs and cost-effectiveness of workforce configurations in English acute hospitals.

Peter Griffiths, Christina Saville, Jane Ball, David Culliford, Jeremy Jones, Francesca Lambert, Paul Meredith, Bruna Rubbo, Lesley Turner, Chiara Dall'Ora
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The National Health Service faces significant challenges in recruiting and retaining registered nurses. Recruiting unregistered staff is often adopted as a solution to the registered nurse shortage, but recent research found lower registered nurse staffing levels increase hospital mortality with no evidence that higher levels of assistant staff reduced risk.

Objectives: To estimate the consequences, costs and cost-effectiveness of variation in the size and composition of the staff on acute hospital wards in England. To determine if results are likely to be sensitive to staff groups such as doctors and therapists, who are not on ward rosters, associations between staffing and outcomes for multiple staff groups, including medical, are explored at hospital level.

Design: A national cross-sectional panel study and a patient-level longitudinal observational study using routine data.

Setting: All English acute hospital Trusts and a subsample of four Trusts for the patient-level study.

Interventions: Naturally occurring variation in the size and composition of the workforce.

Participants: Patients experiencing a hospital admission with an overnight stay and nursing staff providing care on inpatient wards.

Outcomes: Death, patient and staff experience, length of stay, re-admission, adverse events, incidents (Datix), staff sickness, costs and quality-adjusted life-years.

Data sources: Publicly available records of hospital activity, staffing and outcomes (cross-sectional study) and hospital administrative systems (longitudinal study).

Results: In the cross-sectional study, lower staffing levels from doctors and allied health professionals were associated with increased risk of death. Higher nurse staffing levels were associated with better patient experience and staff well-being. In the longitudinal study, for adult inpatients, exposure to days with lower-than-expected registered nurses or nursing assistant staff was associated with increased hazard of death (adjusted hazard ratio 1.08/1.07, 95% confidence interval 1.07 to 1.09/1.06 to 1.08) and longer hospital stays. Low registered nurse staffing was also associated with increased hazard of re-admission (adjusted hazard ratio 1.01, 95% confidence interval 1.01 to 1.02). Eliminating low staffing cost £2778 per quality-adjusted life-years gained. Avoidance of registered nurse understaffing gave more benefits and was more cost-effective for highly acute patients. Although high bank or agency staffing was associated with increased hazard of death, avoiding low staffing using temporary staff still reduced mortality but was more costly and less effective than using permanent staff. If costs of avoided hospital stays are included, avoiding low staffing generates a net cost saving. Exploration of thresholds for low staffing indicated a greater beneficial effect from registered nurse staffing higher than current norms.

Limitations: This is an observational study. Causal inferences cannot be made from these results in isolation. Quality-adjusted life-years gains were estimated, although conclusions are not sensitive to assumptions or discount rates. We used current ward norms as reference for low staffing.

Conclusions: Our results show the adverse effects of low nurse staffing but also show that medical and allied health professional staffing are important considerations for patient safety. Eliminating low registered nurse staffing gave more benefits than eliminating assistant staffing.

Future work: Research is needed to validate methods to determine nurse staffing requirements, and the interaction between registered nurse and assistant staffing needs further exploration.

Study registration: This study is registered as Current Controlled Trials ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04374812.

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR128056) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 13, No. 25. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

后果,成本和成本效益的劳动力配置在英国急症医院。
背景:国民保健服务在招聘和留住注册护士方面面临着重大挑战。招聘未注册的工作人员通常被用来解决注册护士短缺的问题,但最近的研究发现,注册护士人数较少会增加医院死亡率,没有证据表明助理工作人员人数较多会降低风险。目的:估计后果,成本和成本效益变化的规模和组成的工作人员在英国急性医院病房。为了确定结果是否可能对医生和治疗师等不在病区名册上的工作人员群体敏感,在医院一级探讨了包括医务人员在内的多个工作人员群体的人员配备与结果之间的关系。设计:一项全国横断面小组研究和一项使用常规数据的患者水平纵向观察研究。背景:所有英国急性医院信托和四家信托的子样本进行患者水平的研究。干预措施:劳动力规模和构成的自然变化。参与者:住院过夜的患者和在住院病房提供护理的护理人员。结果:死亡、病人和工作人员经验、住院时间、再入院、不良事件、事件(Datix)、工作人员疾病、费用和质量调整生命年。数据来源:医院活动、人员配备和结果的公开记录(横断面研究)和医院管理系统(纵向研究)。结果:在横断面研究中,较低的医生和专职卫生专业人员配备水平与死亡风险增加有关。较高的护士配备水平与更好的患者体验和员工幸福感相关。在纵向研究中,对于成年住院患者,暴露于低于预期的注册护士或护理助理人员的天数与死亡风险增加(调整风险比1.08/1.07,95%置信区间1.07至1.09/1.06至1.08)和住院时间延长相关。低注册护士配置也与再入院风险增加相关(调整风险比1.01,95%可信区间1.01 ~ 1.02)。消除低人力成本为每增加质量调整寿命年2778英镑。避免注册护士人手不足给了更多的好处,更符合成本效益的高度急性患者。虽然银行或机构人员配置过多与死亡危险增加有关,但使用临时工作人员避免人员配置过少仍然可以降低死亡率,但与使用长期工作人员相比,成本更高,效果更差。如果包括避免住院的费用,避免人员配备不足可产生净成本节约。对低人员配备阈值的探索表明,注册护士配备高于当前规范的有益效果更大。局限性:这是一项观察性研究。不能孤立地从这些结果中作出因果推论。虽然结论对假设或贴现率不敏感,但对质量调整后的寿命年收益进行了估计。我们以目前的病房标准作为编制不足的参考。结论:我们的研究结果显示了低护士配备的不利影响,但也表明医疗和联合卫生专业人员配备是患者安全的重要考虑因素。减少注册护士人数比减少助理人数带来更多的好处。未来工作:确定护理人员配备需求的方法有待研究验证,注册护士与助理人员配备之间的相互作用有待进一步探索。研究注册:本研究注册为Current Controlled Trials ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04374812。资助:该奖项由国家卫生和保健研究所(NIHR)卫生和社会保健提供研究项目(NIHR奖励编号:NIHR128056)资助,全文发表在《卫生和社会保健提供研究》上;第13卷,第25号有关进一步的奖励信息,请参阅美国国立卫生研究院资助和奖励网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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