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STAFFING & DUTY SCHEDULING Pamela M. Veroy RN, MAN “Be fair In the distributi on of duty hours to your nursing staff.”

Staffing

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Page 1: Staffing

STAFFING & DUTY

SCHEDULING

Pamela M. Veroy RN, MAN

“Be fair In the distributionof duty hours to your nursingstaff.”

Page 2: Staffing

Staffing

• Is the process of determining and providing the acceptable number and mix of nursing personnel to produce a desired level of care to meet the patient’s demand.

• Purpose: to provide each nursing unit with an appropriate and acceptable number of workers in each category to perform the nursing tasks required.

Page 3: Staffing

Factors affecting staffing

• 1. The type, philosophy and objectives f the hospital and the nursing service

• 2. the population served or the kind of patients served whether pay or

charity

• 3. the number of patients and severity of their illness-knowledge and ability of nursing personnel are matched with

the actual care needs of patients

Page 4: Staffing

Factors affecting staffing

• 4. Availability and characteristics of the nursing staff, including education, level of preparation, mix of personnel, number and position:

• 5. administrative policies such as rotation, weekends and holiday off-duties

• 6. standards of care desired which should be available and clearly spelled out.

Page 5: Staffing

Factors affecting staffing• 7. layout of the various nursing units and

resources available within the department such as adequate equipment, supplies and materials.

• 8. budget including the amount alloted to salaries, fringe benefits, supplies,

materials and equipment;• 9. professional activities and priorities in non-

patient activities like involvement in professional organizations, formal educational development, participation in research and staff development

Page 6: Staffing

Factors affecting staffing

• 10. teaching program or the extent of staff involvement in teaching activities

• 11. expected hours of work per annum of each employee. This is influenced by the 40-hr week law; and

• 12. patters of work schedule-traditional 5 days per week, 8 hours per day; 4 days a week, ten hours per day and three days off; or 3

½ days of 12 hours per day and 3 ½ days off per week.

Page 7: Staffing

Nursing Care hours per patient/day according to classification of patients per units

Cases/Patients NCH/Pt/Day Prof to Non Prof Ratio

1. General Medicine 3.5 60:40

2. Medical 3.4 60:40

3. Surgical 3.4 60:40

4. Obstetrics 3.0 60:40

5. Pediatrics 4.6 70:30

6. Pathologic Nursery 2.8 55:45

7. ER/ICU/RR 6.0 70:30

8. CCU 6.0 80:20

Page 8: Staffing

Patient Care Classification System

• It is a method of grouping patients according to the amount and complexity of their nursing care requirements and the nursing time and skill they require.

• Purpose:• 1. Serve in determining the amount of nursing

care required, generally within 24 hours.• 2. to determine the category of nursing

personnel who should provide that care.

Page 9: Staffing

Classification CategoriesLevel I-Self

Care or Minimal Care-NCH 1.5/pt/day- Ratio 55:45

-Can take a bath on his own; feed himself; perform his own ADL. -For discharge pt; non-emergency, newly admitted don’t exhibit unusual s/s; - requires little treatment and observation

Level II – Moderate Care or

Intermediate Care

-NCH 3/pt- Ratio 60:40

-Need some assistance in bathing, feeding, ambulating for short period.-Extreme s/s of illness must have subsided or have not yet appeared-May have slight emotional needs-v/s taking ordered 3x/shift; with IVF/BT; are semi-conscious and exhibiting some psychosocial or social problems;- periodic treatments and/or observations and /instructions

Page 10: Staffing

Classification CategoriesLevel III –

Total, Complete or

Intensive Care

-NCM 6hrs/pt/day-Ratio 65:35

-Patient are completely dependent upon the nursing personnel.-They are provided complete bath, are fed, may or may not be unconscious, with marked emotional needs; with v/s monitoring more than 3x/shift-Maybe on continuous oxygen therapy, with chest or abdominal tubes-They require close observation at least every 30 minutes for impending hemorrhage, with hypo or hypertension and/ or cardiac arrhythmia

Page 11: Staffing

Classification CategoriesLevel IV- Highly

Specialized Critical Care

-NCH 6-9 or more /pt/day- Ratio 70:30 or 80:20

-Need maximum level of nursing care with a ratio of 80 professionals to 20 non-professionals.-Needs continuous treatment and observation-With many medications, IV piggy backs; v/s monitoring every 15-30 minutes; hourly output.-There are significant changes in doctor’s orders

Page 12: Staffing

Categories of Level of Care of Patients: Nursing Care Hours/Pt/Day & Ratio of Prof-Non Prof

Levels of Care NCH Needed Per Pt./Day

Ratio of Prof to Non-Prof

Level I – Self-Care or Minimal Care

1.50 5:45

Level II Moderate or Intermediate

Care

3.0 60:40

Level II Total or Intensive Care

4.5 65:35

Level IV Highly Specialized or Critical Care

6.07 or higher

70:3080:20

Page 13: Staffing

Percentage of patients at various levels of care per type of hospital

Type of Hospital Minimal Care

Moderate Care

Intensive Care

Highly Spl. Care

Primary Hospital 70 25 5 -

Secondary Hospital 65 30 5 -

Tertiary Hospital 30 45 15 10

Special Tertiary Hospital

10 25 45 20

Page 14: Staffing

Computing for the number of nursing personnel needed

- should ensure that there is sufficient staff to cover all shifts, off-duties, holidays, leaves,

absences, and time for staff development programs.

- The Forty-Hour Week Law (Republic Act 5901)- for 100 bed capacity and up

-Granting of the 3-day special privilege to govt. employees by the Civil Service Commission as per Memorandum Circular No. 6 series of 1996 (birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, funerals (mourning), relocation, enrollment or graduation leave, hospitalization, and accident leave.

Page 15: Staffing

Total No. working-Non working days & hours of nursing personnel per year

Rights & Privileges Given Each Personnel Per Year

Working Hours Per Week

40 hours 48 hours

1. Vacation Leave2. Sick Leave3. Legal Holidays4. Special Holidays5. Special Privileges6. Off-Duties as per R.A. 59017. Continuing Education Program Total Non-working Days per year Total working days per year Total working hours per year

15151023

1043

152213

1,704

15151023

523

100265

2,120

Page 16: Staffing

Relievers Needed

- To compute for relievers needed, the following should be considered;

1. Average number of leaves taken each year------ 15

a. vacation 15

b. sick leave 5

2. Holidays -----------------------------------------------------12

3. Special Privileges as per CSC MC#6 s. 1996-------3

4. Continuing Educ. Prog. For professionals------------3

Total Average Leave-------33

Page 17: Staffing

To determine the relievers needed

- divide 33 by number of working days per year each employee served (whether 213 or 265)

- result will be 0.15 per persons works for 40 hour/week

- result will be 0.12 per persons works for 48 hour/week

- multiply the computed reliever per person by the computed number of nsg personnel

- this will give you the total number of relievers

Page 18: Staffing

Staffing FormulaTo illustrate: Find the number of nursing according to levels of care needed.

1. Categorize the patients according to levels of care needed

250 pts x 0.30 = 75 pts needing minimal care

250 pts x 0.45 = 112.5 pts needing moderate care

250 pts x 0.15 = 37.5 pts needed intensive care

250 pts x 0.01 = 25 pts need highly specialized 250 nsg care

Page 19: Staffing

2. Find the number of nursing care hours (NCH) needed by patients at each level of care per day.

75 pts x 1.5 (NCH needed at Level I) = 112.5 MCH/day

112.5 pts x 3 (NCH needed at Level II) = 337.5 NCH/day

37.5 pts x 4.5 (NCH needed at Level II) = 168.75 NCH/day

25 pts x 6 (NCH needed at Level IV) = 150 NCH/day

Total 768.75 NCH/day

3. Find the total NCH needed by 250 patients per year.

768.75 x 365 (days/yr) = 280,593.75 NCH/year

Page 20: Staffing

4. Find the actual working hours rendered by each nursing personnel per year.

8 (hrs/day) x 213 (working days/year) = 1,704 (working hours/year)

5. Find the total number of nursing personnel needed.

a. Total NCH per year = 280,593.75 = 165

Working hrs/year 1,704

b. relief x total nsg. Personnel = 165 x 0.15 = 25

c. total nursing personnel needed 165 + 25 = 190

Page 21: Staffing

6. Categorize to professional and non-professional personnel ratio of prof to non-prof in a tertiary hospital is 65:35

190 x .65 = 134 professional nurses

190 x .35 = 66 nursing attendants

7. Distribute by shifts

124 nurses x .45 = 56 nurses on AM shift

124 nurses x .37 = 46 nurses on PM shift

124 nurses x .18 = 22 nurses on night shift

Total 124 nurses

66 nsg attendants x .45 = 30 nsg. attendants on AM shift

66 nsg attendants x .37 = 24 nsg attendants on PM shift

66 nsg attendents x .18 = 12 nursing attendants on noc

Total = 66 nursing attendants

Page 22: Staffing

Assessing a Scheduling System

1. Ability to cover the needs of the unit

2. quality to enhance the nursing personnel's knowledge, training and experience

3. fairness to the staff – fair share of weekends, holiday offs, rotation patters for the whole year

including assignment to “difficult” or “light” or “undesirable” units or shifts

4. stability – the schedule must be harmonized with their family or social activities of the nurse staff

5. flexibility – ability to handle changes brought by emergency leaves.

Page 23: Staffing

Make a schedule in a weekly or monthly basis and do cycle system with the staff under the area assigned for fairness and

flexibility.

Page 24: Staffing

A one-week cyclical schedule

Personnel S M T W T F S

7/3 Headnurse/Senior Nurse x x

Staff Nurse x x

Nsg. Att. x x

3/11 Staff Nurse x x

Nsg. Att. x x

11/7 Staff Nurse x x

Nsg. Att. x x

Gen. Rel. 3/11; 11/7 S. nurse 3/11 3/11 11/7 x x 3/11 11/7

N. Att. 3/11 11/7 x 7/3 3/11 11/7 x