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Development of Optimal Nursing Workforce Model and Its Application to Outpatients in a Tertiary Hospital

Author

Listed:
  • Jinhyun Kim

    (College of Nursing, Seoul National University)

  • Eunhee Lee

    (Division of Nursing, Hallym University)

  • Kyounga Lee

    (College of Nursing, Seoul National University)

  • YeonHee Kim

    (Nursing Department, Asan Medical Center)

  • SunHee Lee

    (Children?s Nursing Team, Asan Medical Center)

  • JiHey Kim

    (GI outpatient Department, Asan Medical Center)

  • KyeongYeon Oh

    (GI outpatient Department, Asan Medical Center)

  • KyeongOk Heo

    (Urology Department, Asan Medical Center)

  • HyunAh Choi

    (GY inpatient Department, Asan Medical Center)

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to develop an optimal allocation model of nursing workforce and apply it to outpatients at a tertiary hospital in Korea. A workload model that consists of average number of patients per day and nursing time per patient was used to estimate the optimal number of nursing workforce in each clinical department, considering the annual off days per nursing staff. The nursing time was classified into three stages(reception-treatment-consulting) and the data were collected by one-to-one observation for three years. It was analyzed by three scenarios: scenario 1 considered actual days spent on vacation and holiday, scenario 2 reflected all holidays and annual leaves under labor act, and scenario 3 included only mandatory holidays and off days. The average number of patients per day varied from 29 to 846 according to clinical department, and required nursing time per patient was from 5.1 to 14.2 minutes. The actual nursing staffs per clinical department were 7.6 persons. The optimal nursing workforce was 7.1, 6.4, and 6.0 persons, respectively in the scenario 1, 2, and 3. In scenario 1, it was analyzed that -3.6 to 7.9 additional nursing staffs should be employed and an average of 0.5 staffs can be reduced. In scenario 2, it was analyzed that -2.9 to 8.7 (average 1.3) additional nursing staffs need to be employed. Lastly, scenario 3 estimated that -2.5 to 9.2 (average 1.7) additional nursing staffs need to be employed. However, this study estimated an optimal nursing workforce to a decimal point, while the number of nurses employed in real world is a positive integer. With nursing manpower allocation rounded to the nearest decimal, nurse staffing condition and patient outcomes could be improved. Therefore, it is recommended to consider an integer model of nurse staffing level in the further detailed studies.* This study was supported by National Research Foundation of Korea.

Suggested Citation

  • Jinhyun Kim & Eunhee Lee & Kyounga Lee & YeonHee Kim & SunHee Lee & JiHey Kim & KyeongYeon Oh & KyeongOk Heo & HyunAh Choi, 2017. "Development of Optimal Nursing Workforce Model and Its Application to Outpatients in a Tertiary Hospital," Proceedings of International Academic Conferences 5007702, International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences.
  • Handle: RePEc:sek:iacpro:5007702
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    More about this item

    Keywords

    Nursing workforce; Nurse staffing model; Workload;
    All these keywords.

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