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Decreasing Injury Among Nursing Staff

By:   •  Research Paper  •  2,007 Words  •  December 2, 2009  •  3,287 Views

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Essay title: Decreasing Injury Among Nursing Staff

Decreasing Injury among Nursing Staff

Decreasing Injury among Nursing Staff

Skeletal injuries among nursing staff have been steadily rising in the hospital, especially with the elevating weight problem in North Carolina. Nursing is the number one profession receiving workers’ compensation. Injury data has shown that 17 out of 100 nurses are reporting work-related injuries (“Bill,” 2006, p. 5). These injuries have costly implications for insurers, health care providers, and hospitals while driving nurses away from the bedside.

In the past two years Massachusetts Nursing Association (MNA) has implemented a plan that would require Massachusetts hospitals to provide a system to assist nurses with safe patient handling in order to avoid injury (“MNA,” 2006, p.14). Each facility will have a written organization-wide safe lifting and handling plain containing the following: policy and procedures describing safe patient handling and lifting philosophy and approach; procedures; equipment type, numbers and location; mechanism for addressing nurses’ refusal to perform unsafe lifting and handling; and education and training programs conducted or utilized at the facility by qualified personnel (“MNA,” 2006, p.14).

The major goal of our hospital is to provide patients with high levels of care while protecting the hospitals employees from bodily harm. Research has shown nursing staff have suffered the stress and bodily pain accompanied with their duty to provide top care to patients (“MNA,” 2006, p.14). Offering movement technique classes, installation of lift equipment and implementing a plan similar to the Massachusetts Nursing Association will contribute to lowing musculoskeletal injuries

Methods

NCLive

The database available through NCLive gave me access to professional journals that were helpful in establishing ideas for decreasing injuries among nursing staff.

Internet Sales Catalog

I retrieved price ranges for several high performance ceiling lift equipment manufacturers to find a suitable cost for the hospital.

Personal Interview

The personal Interview I conducted with Donald Prilliman, United Parcel Service (UPS), helped me understand the monetary benefits from a business point of view for correcting this issue in a timely manner.

Internet Resources

I retrieved many resources through the World Wide Web that supported most of my visions of how to reduce the musculoskeletal injuries and costs of implementing my recommendations.

Results

Why are back Injuries Increasing Among Nursing Staff?

According to the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics nursing staff is the number one occupation receiving workers’ compensation for work-related musculoskeletal injuries. This graph represents several top ranked occupations and the number of injured workers a year with personal statistics listed by thousands.

Back injuries among nursing staff have been increasing over the last 20 years. Nursing staff have to lift the patients without further harm to the patient. Most nurses are threatened by costly lawsuits and are having to lift the patient in such an awkward way that they have to bend and twist in an ergonomically incorrect posture (“MNA,” 2006, p.14).

Another reason back injuries are increasing among nurses is because patients are becoming heavier. Nurses have to move heavier patients at the same rate as a normal sized patient. Among other reasons, patients with critical injuries are harder to move because of their fragile state. One of the nurses’ goals is not to cause further harm to the patients. They are also trying to avoid interrupting patients’ IV’s, other tubing, casts, wound dressings, and injures to limbs (“MNA,” 2006, p. 14). While doing so the nurses are putting themselves at risk of having musculoskeletal problems (“MNA,” 2006, p. 14).

Another factor for injuries increasing among nursing staff is the self-neglect nurses put on themselves. Nurses historically have been educated to emphasize patient safety, while emphasis on self-protection is almost

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