| Literature DB >> 29976191 |
Lori J Delaney1,2,3, Marian J Currie4,5, Hsin-Chia Carol Huang6, Violeta Lopez7, Frank Van Haren5,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Poor sleep is known to adversely affect hospital patients' recovery and rehabilitation. The aim of the study was to investigate the perceived duration and quality of patient sleep and identify any environmental factors associated with patient-reported poor sleep in hospital.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical care; Environmental stressor; Hospital; Medical; Noise; Nursing; Sleep; Sleep disturbance
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29976191 PMCID: PMC6034217 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3201-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Comparison of Nursing Staff and Patients’ self-reported sleep quality in Hospital. Legend: Nursing staff observational assessment of patient sleep quality did not reflect patients self-reported sleep quality, indicating considerable discordance and as a surrogate assessment may not be reflective of the patients experience
Fig. 2Comparison of Nursing Staff and Patients’ identified factors contributing to sleep disturbance. Legend: The core themes identified by nursing staff and patients as factors that contributed to sleep distance. The combination of clinical care and noise was acknowledge by staff as a disruptive factor and an issue reported by patients. Factors such as pain and cohort rooms were identified by patients as issues that impacted on sleep, but not reported by nursing staff as issues impacting on sleep
Fig. 3Mean noise levels recorded per monitoring location in the clinical wards. Legend: Noise levels had a similar pattern throughout the clinical areas, with single patient rooms having comparable noise levels to shared patient rooms. Nursing stations within all clinical wards was identified as being the site of considerable noise over the monitoring period
Fig. 4Mean luminance levels recorded per monitoring location. Legend: Exposure to light over the monitoring period displayed a consistent pattern of higher artificial light levels between 22:00 h to 24:00 and again from 05:00 h to 07:00 h. This is consistent with the changeover of staff between the shifts and increased clinical activity