虚拟护理中心护士的护理活动和相关工作量:一项多中心观察性研究。

IF 7.7
PLOS digital health Pub Date : 2025-08-12 eCollection Date: 2025-08-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pdig.0000974
Jobbe P L Leenen, Jedidja Lok-Visser, Cindy Vollenbroek, Henk Sonneveld, Thijs Van Houwelingen, Gréanne Leeftink
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虚拟护理中心(vcc)是医院的新型病房,便于虚拟护理护士提供远程监测和居家病人护理。鉴于自2019冠状病毒病大流行以来,虚拟护理护士迅速出现,人们对虚拟护理护士的工作和相关工作量缺乏了解。因此,本研究的目的是确定在虚拟护理中心(vcc)中进行的护理活动,并评估护士与这些活动相关的感知工作量。进行了一项多中心描述性、观察性横断面研究。数据收集(2024年2月至6月)包括三个步骤:建立护理活动列表,使用nasa任务负荷指数和分析层次过程(AHP)定义和量化工作量,并通过调查测量护理活动相关的工作量,该调查涉及荷兰六个vcc的19名虚拟护理护士,这些护士已在vcc工作至少一年。最终,我们确定了21项护理活动,分为五个领域:教育和培训(n = 2),发展和推广新的护理途径(n = 4),患者接触(n = 4),临床决策(n = 8)和管理(n = 2)。总体工作量主要被评为低到中等,开发新的数字护理途径的协议是最苛刻的活动。常规护理活动,如病人接触和临床决策,导致低到非常低的工作量评级。总之,我们发现VCC护士从事广泛的传统和新型护理任务,我们使用一种整合NASA-TLX和AHP的新方法来测量他们的相关工作量。最高的相关工作量表明需要进行任务区分和/或额外的培训,以支持护士管理这些高要求的任务。VCC模式可能为在传统病房中经历高工作量的护士提供一个可行的替代方案,可能减轻传统医疗保健机构中护理人员的一些压力,主要是在从身体需求到精神需求的转变方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nursing activities and associated workload of nurses in virtual care centres: A multicentre observational study.

Virtual care centres (VCCs) are novel wards of hospitals and facilitate the provision of remote monitoring and home-based patient care by virtual care nurses. Whereas since the COVID-19 pandemic VCCs have rapidly emerged, there is a lack of insight in virtual care nurses' work and the associated work load. Therefore, the aim of this study was to identify the nursing activities performed in Virtual Care Centers (VCCs) and assess nurses' perceived workload associated with these activities. A multicentre descriptive, observational cross-sectional study was performed. Data collection (February - June 2024) involved three steps: establishing a list of nursing activities, defining and quantifying workload using the NASA-Task Load Index and Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP), and measuring nursing activity-associated workload by a survey involving 19 virtual care nurses across six VCCs in the Netherlands who had been employed in VCCs for at least one year. Eventually, we identified 21 nursing activities categorized into five areas: education and training (n = 2), development and promotion of new care pathways (n = 4), patient contact (n = 4), clinical decision-making (n = 8), and administration (n = 2). The overall workload was predominantly rated as low to medium, with the development of protocols for new digital care pathways being the most demanding activity. Routine nursing activities, such as patient contact and clinical decision-making, resulted in low to very low workload ratings. In conclusion, we found VCC nurses engage in a broad spectrum of conventional and novel nursing tasks, of which we measured their associated workload using a novel approach integrating NASA-TLX and AHP. The highest associated workload suggest the need for task differentiation and/or additional training to support nurses in managing these high-demand tasks. The VCC model may offer a viable alternative for nurses experiencing high workloads in conventional wards, potentially alleviating some pressures on nursing staff in traditional healthcare settings, mostly in the shift from physical to mental demand.

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