Balancing the scales - Nurses' attempts at meeting family and employer needs in a work intensified environment.

Clicks: 306
ID: 68191
2019
This paper describes findings from a survey conducted in New Zealand exploring nurses' decision making about when to delay care, delegate care, hand care over, or leave care undone. Unanticipated findings identified processes that nurses go through when deciding to take planned/unplanned leave when wards are constrained through budget limitations.Missed/rationed care is increasingly the focus of attention in international studies, identifying a complex interplay of organisational, professional and personal factors affecting nurses' decision making when faced with limited organisational time, human and material resources to provide care.The survey presented nurses with Likert-scale questions with option for free text comments. This paper reports on the commentaries about work-life balance.Nurses described workload pressures that lead to rationing care affected them, and the long-term effect on them as individuals. Nurses verbalised the difficulties and associated guilt about taking leaving and sick leave when wards were short staffed.Nurses consider how their absence will affect the workspace and their home first, considering the impact on themselves last.The findings may provide valuable insights for nurse managers in relation to workforce allocations and resources where acknowledgement of work-life balance is considered.
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Authors Harvey, Clare;Baldwin, Adele;Thompson, Shona;Meyer, Alannah;Pearson, Maria;Otis, Edmond;
Journal journal of nursing management
Year 2019
DOI 10.1111/jonm.12913
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