TY - JOUR
T1 - Hospital work environments, nurse characteristics, and sharps injuries
AU - Clarke, Sean P.
N1 - Funding Information:
Data collection was supported by the National Institute of Nursing Research, National Institutes of Health (ROI-NR04513, L. Aiken, University of Pennsylvania, PI); the Commonwealth Fund; the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; and the Baxter Foundation, Preparation of this article was assisted by a Mentored Career Award (K01-NR07895, S. Clarke, PI).
PY - 2007/6
Y1 - 2007/6
N2 - Background: A growing body of research links working conditions, such as staffing levels and work environment characteristics, with safety for both patients and workers in health care settings, including sharps injuries in hospital staff nurses. Methods: Surveys of 11,516 staff nurses from 188 Pennsylvania general acute care hospitals in 1999 were analyzed. Hospital work environments, measured using the Practice Environment Scales of the Nursing Work Index-Revised, and staffing were tested as predictors of experiencing at least one sharps injury in the preceding year, both before and after controlling for nurse risk factors, use of safety-engineered devices, and hospital structural characteristics. Results: Nurses with less than 5 years of experience, perioperative nurses, and those performing routine venipuncture for blood draws were more likely to be injured. Nurses working in hospitals with the most favorable working environments were one-third less likely to be injured. Staffing levels were not associated with sharps injuries. Conclusions: Across a large state, nurses working in acute care hospitals with better practice environments had fewer sharps injuries. Work environment conditions and specialty- and setting-specific risk factors deserve continued attention in sharps injury research.
AB - Background: A growing body of research links working conditions, such as staffing levels and work environment characteristics, with safety for both patients and workers in health care settings, including sharps injuries in hospital staff nurses. Methods: Surveys of 11,516 staff nurses from 188 Pennsylvania general acute care hospitals in 1999 were analyzed. Hospital work environments, measured using the Practice Environment Scales of the Nursing Work Index-Revised, and staffing were tested as predictors of experiencing at least one sharps injury in the preceding year, both before and after controlling for nurse risk factors, use of safety-engineered devices, and hospital structural characteristics. Results: Nurses with less than 5 years of experience, perioperative nurses, and those performing routine venipuncture for blood draws were more likely to be injured. Nurses working in hospitals with the most favorable working environments were one-third less likely to be injured. Staffing levels were not associated with sharps injuries. Conclusions: Across a large state, nurses working in acute care hospitals with better practice environments had fewer sharps injuries. Work environment conditions and specialty- and setting-specific risk factors deserve continued attention in sharps injury research.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ajic.2006.07.014
DO - 10.1016/j.ajic.2006.07.014
M3 - Article
C2 - 17577476
AN - SCOPUS:34250160899
SN - 0196-6553
VL - 35
SP - 302
EP - 309
JO - American Journal of Infection Control
JF - American Journal of Infection Control
IS - 5
ER -