학술논문

Impacts of Occupational Cognitive Failure and Subjective Workload on Patient Safety Incidents among Intensive Care Units Nurses.
Document Type
Article
Source
Indian Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine. May-Aug2020, Vol. 24 Issue 2, p96-101. 6p.
Subject
*COGNITION disorders
*STATISTICAL correlation
*INTENSIVE care nursing
*INTENSIVE care units
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL errors
*PATIENT safety
*QUESTIONNAIRES
*STATISTICS
*EMPLOYEES' workload
*LOGISTIC regression analysis
*DATA analysis
*ODDS ratio
*MANN Whitney U Test
*KRUSKAL-Wallis Test
Language
ISSN
0973-2284
Abstract
Background: Life-saving treatments and high-quality care techniques increase the opportunity for patient safety incidents in Intensive care unit. Aims: This descriptive correlation study aimed to determine the impacts of occupational cognitive failure and subjective workload on patient safety incidents among intensive care units nurses. Methods and Material: One hundred seventy-six nurses working in intensive care units were included using census sampling. The data collection tools consisted of demographic and occupational data, standard questionnaires of subjective workload (NASA-TLX) and occupational cognitive failure (OCFQ), and a question about frequency of patient safety incidents. Data analysis was performed using Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis, Spearman rank correlation coefficient, and logistic regression tests. Results: Occupational cognitive failure (OR = 1.043), subjective workload in dimension of "performance" (OR = 0.982), age (OR = 0.947), and gender (OR = 3.726) were important predictive variables of patient safety incidents. Conclusions: Nursing mangers and policymakers can consider the factors identified for staffing nurses and development of patient safety programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]