| Literature DB >> 28697685 |
Tommaso Bellandi1, Alessandro Cerri1, Giulia Carreras2, Scott Walter3, Cipriana Mengozzi1, Sara Albolino1, Eleonora Mastrominico4, Fernando Renzetti4, Riccardo Tartaglia1, Johanna Westbrook3.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to obtain baseline data on doctors' and nurses' work activities and rates of interruptions and multitasking to improve work organisation and processes. Data were collected in six surgical units with the WOMBAT (Work Observation Method by Activity Timing) tool. Results show that doctors and nurses received approximately 13 interruptions per hour, or one interruption every 4.5 min. Compared to doctors, nurses were more prone to interruptions in most activities, while doctors performed multitasking (33.47% of their time, 95% CI 31.84-35.17%) more than nurses (15.23%, 95% CI 14.24-16.25%). Overall, the time dedicated to patient care is relatively limited for both professions (37.21%, 95% CI 34.95-39.60% for doctors, 27.22%, 95% CI 25.18-29.60% for nurses) compared to the time spent for registration of data and professional communication, that accounts for two-thirds of doctors' time and nearly half of nurses' time. Further investigation is needed on strategies to manage job demands and professional communications. Practitioner Summary: This study offers further findings on the characteristics and frequency of multitasking and interruptions in surgery, with a comparison of how they affect doctors and nurses. Further investigation is needed to improve the management of job demands and communications according to the results.Entities:
Keywords: Multitasking and interruptions; doctors’ and nurses’ workload; safety in surgery; structured observations
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28697685 DOI: 10.1080/00140139.2017.1349934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ergonomics ISSN: 0014-0139 Impact factor: 2.778