• Pak J Med Sci · Nov 2018

    Impact of morning and rotational duties on physical health of nurses working in tertiary care hospitals of Karachi.

    • Amjad Ali, Abdur Rasheed, and Subia Naz.
    • Mr. Amjad Ali, Institute of Nursing MS-Nursing, Lecturer, Dow University of Health Sciences Karachi, Pakistan.
    • Pak J Med Sci. 2018 Nov 1; 34 (6): 1545-1549.

    Background & ObjectivesIn the system related to health care, shifting duties are considered essential and obligatory to make sure the stability of care in hospitals. Scheduling and shifting are the key uniqueness of shift work and nurses are mostly bounded into different schedules that facilitate 24-hour care. Our objective was to identify the impact of morning and rotational duties on physical health of nurses working in tertiary care hospitals.MethodsA total of 154 nurses from two tertiary care hospitals in Karachi were included in this study. Data were collected through the Short Form Health Servay-26 between May to June 2017. Questionnaire form consisted of five domains including Physical functioning, Role limitations due to physical health, Energy/Fatigue, Pain and General health.ResultsMost of the study participants were staff nurses (66.9%) and few were head nurse and assistant head nurses 13.6% and 8.4% respectively. Nurses' characteristics such as gender, age, educational level, designation and monthly income were found significant with duty shift with p-values 0.049, 0.007, <0.001 and 0.017 respectively. Energy/Fatigue was only domain of SF-26 which showed significant mean difference (p-value <0.001) between morning and rotational duties.ConclusionThis research concludes that nurses working in rotational duties were more prone to develop physical problem as compared to morning duties. Energy/Fatigue showed significant mean difference.

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