Otago Daily Times

‘New model’ needed for sleepy nurses

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WELLINGTON: A sleep expert says a new model is needed to manage nurses’ shift work and fatiguerel­ated risk.

Massey University’s Sleep/Wake Centre found one in three nurses had fallen asleep at the wheel while driving home from work.

The centre’s director, Prof Philippa Gander, told Morning Report nurses’ shifts could be better managed through a code of practice.

Changes to rostering and the approaches to managing the risk in different medical settings were needed.

‘‘If you have a nurse who is suffering from the effects of sleep loss and being on a series of night shifts working at the wrong time, she or he is not going to be able to function as well as they would if they were fully rested and working during the day,’’ she said.

The report also noted that ‘‘after five years, nurses working nights have significan­tly higher mortality rates from all causes and from cardiovasc­ular disease. After 15 years of night work, nurses have a higher risk of death from lung cancer and ischaemic stroke.’’

With increasing years of night work, there was also an increase in the risk of other health problems, the report said.

‘‘So how do we manage the risk? The risks are very different if you are in ICU and you have a patient who is sedated; you are in a highly technical proceduris­ed environmen­t and there’s plenty of help around you, versus being a mental health nurse who has unpredicta­ble patients who may be up and about all night doing things.’’

A new model was needed, she said, combining the expertise of nurses in different practice areas with sleep science knowledge and hospital managers’ needs. — RNZ

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