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Article

Clinical decisions and time since rest break: An analysis of decision fatigue in nurses

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Citation

Allan JL, Johnston DW, Powell DJH, Farquharson B, Jones MC, Leckie G & Johnston M (2019) Clinical decisions and time since rest break: An analysis of decision fatigue in nurses. Health Psychology, 38 (4), pp. 318-324. https://doi.org/10.1037/hea0000725

Abstract
Objective: The present study investigates whether nurses working for a national medical telephone helpline show evidence of “decision fatigue,” as measured by a shift from effortful to easier and more conservative decisions as the time since their last rest break increases. Method: In an observational, repeated-measures study, data from approximately 4,000 calls to 150 nurses working for the Scottish NHS 24 medical helpline (37% of the national workforce) were modeled to determine whether the likelihood of a nurse{\textquoteright}s decision to refer a patient to another health professional the same day (the clinically safest but most conservative and resource inefficient decision) varied according to the number of calls taken/time elapsed since a nurse{\textquoteright}s last rest break and/or since the start of shift. Analyses used mixed-effect logistic regression. Results: For every consecutive call taken since last rest break, the odds of nurses making a conservative management decision (i.e., arranging for callers to see another health professional the same day) increased by 5.5% (p = .001, 95% confidence interval [CI: 2.2, 8.8]), an increase in odds of 20.5% per work hour (p < .001, 95% CI [9.1, 33.2]) or 49.0% (on average) from immediately after 1 break to immediately before the next. Decision-making was not significantly related to general or cumulative workload (calls or time elapsed since start of shift). Conclusions: Every consecutive decision that nurses make since their last break produces a predictable shift toward more conservative, and less resource-efficient, decisions. Theoretical models of cognitive fatigue can elucidate how and why this shift occurs, helping to identify potentially modifiable determinants of patient care.

Keywords
decision making; fatigue; clinical decisions; nurses; efficiency; Humans; Nurses; Adult; Female; Male; Fatigue/diagnosis; Decision Making/ethics; TELEPHONE HELPLINE NURSES; PERFORMANCE; SELF; MODEL; IMPACT; EGO-DEPLETION; STRESS; Decision making; Fatigue; Efficiency; Clinical decisions

Journal
Health Psychology: Volume 38, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2019
Publication date online01/04/2019
Date accepted by journal26/12/2018
PublisherAMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
ISSN0278-6133
eISSN1930-7810

People (2)

Professor Julia Allan

Professor Julia Allan

Professor in Psychology, Psychology

Dr Barbara Farquharson

Dr Barbara Farquharson

Associate Professor in Adult Nursing, NMAHP