• Am. J. Crit. Care · Jan 2014

    Association of sleep and fatigue with decision regret among critical care nurses.

    • Linda D Scott, Cynthia Arslanian-Engoren, and Milo C Engoren.
    • Linda D. Scott is associate dean for academic affairs and an associate professor, Health Systems Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago College of Nursing. Cynthia Arslanian-Engoren is an associate professor of nursing, School of Nursing, and Milo C. Engoren is a clinical professor, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
    • Am. J. Crit. Care. 2014 Jan 1;23(1):13-23.

    BackgroundThe effects of inadequate sleep on clinical decisions may be important for patients in critical care units, who are often more vulnerable than patients in other units. Fatigued nurses are more likely than well-rested nurses to make faulty decisions that lead to decision regret, a negative cognitive emotion that occurs when the actual outcome differs from the desired or expected outcome.ObjectivesTo examine the association between selected sleep variables, impairment due to fatigue, and clinical-decision self-efficacy and regret among critical care nurses. Decision regret was the primary outcome variable. Methods A nonexperimental, descriptive design and extant measures were used to obtain data from a random sample of full-time nurses. Binary logistic regression models were used to examine the association between sleep variables, fatigue, and clinical-decision self-efficacy and regret. The discrimination of the models was compared with the C statistic, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve.ResultsA total of 605 nurses returned the questionnaires (17% response rate). Among these, decision regret was reported by 157 of 546 (29%). Nurses with decision regret reported more fatigue, more daytime sleepiness, less intershift recovery, and worse sleep quality than did nurses without decision regret. Being male, working a 12-hour shift, and clinical-decision satisfaction were significantly associated with decision regret (C statistic, 0.719; SE, 0.024).ConclusionNurses who experience impairments due to fatigue, loss of sleep, and inability to recover between shifts are more likely than unimpaired nurses to report decision regret.

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