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Article

Stress in telephone helpline nurses is associated with failures of concentration, attention and memory, and with more conservative referral decisions

Details

Citation

Allan JL, Farquharson B, Johnston DW, Jones MC, Choudhary CJ & Johnston M (2014) Stress in telephone helpline nurses is associated with failures of concentration, attention and memory, and with more conservative referral decisions. British Journal of Psychology, 105 (2), pp. 200--213. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12030

Abstract
Nurses working for telephone-based medical helplines must maintain attentional focus while quickly and accurately processing information given by callers to make safe and appropriate treatment decisions. In this study, both higher levels of general occupational stress and elevated stress levels on particular shifts were associated with more frequent failures of attention, memory, and concentration in telephone nurses. Exposure to a stressful shift was also associated with a measurable increase in objectively assessed information-processing errors. Nurses who experienced more frequent cognitive failures at work made more conservative decisions, tending to refer patients on to other health professionals more often than other nurses. As stress is associated with cognitive performance decrements in telephone nursing, stress-reduction interventions could improve the quality and safety of care that callers to medical helplines receive.

Keywords
general health questionnaire-12; cognitive failures; job-satisfaction; negative affect; nursing staff, work, burnout, validation, accidents, validity

Journal
British Journal of Psychology: Volume 105, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/05/2014
Publication date online22/04/2014
Date accepted by journal04/02/2013
PublisherWiley-Blackwell
ISSN0007-1269
eISSN2044-8295

People (2)

Professor Julia Allan

Professor Julia Allan

Professor in Psychology, Psychology

Dr Barbara Farquharson

Dr Barbara Farquharson

Associate Professor in Adult Nursing, NMAHP