Work Loads of Nursing Professionals in Hospital Services for Mental Health: an Integrative Review ORIGINAL

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International Medical Society http://imedicalsociety.org International Archives of Medicine Work Loads of Nursing Professionals in Hospital Services for Mental Health: an Integrative Review ORIGINAL Yanna Gomes de Sousa 1, Soraya Maria de Medeiros 2, Sandra Michelle Bessa de Andrade Fernandes 3, Jonas Sami Albuquerque de Oliveira 3, Milva Maria Figueiredo de Martino 2 Abstract Objective: To identify the available evidence in the literature on the workloads that nursing professionals are exposed in hospital mental health services and their impact on the safety of patients in mental distress. Method: This is an integrative literature review in the databases LILACS, CINAHL, (Elsevier), PUBMED, ScienceDirect (Elsevier), Web of Science (Main Collection - Thomson Reuters Scientific), available in full in electronic media between January and March using the descriptors nursing staff, health worker, workloads and mental health services reaching the final sample of 08 articles. Results: The following workloads in mental health services were identified: biological, physical, physiological, mechanical and psychological burden, such causing emotional distress of professionals, accidents and health problems directly on the quality of care and safety of psychiatric patients. 1 Nurse. Master student of the Graduate Program in Nursing, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte/UFRN. Natal (RN), Brazil. 2 Nurse. Ph.D. in Nursing. Professor of the Department of Nursing, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte/ UFRN. Natal (RN), Brazil. 3 Nurse. P.h.D. Teacher s of Nursing Department of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil. Contact information: Yanna Gomes de Sousa. yanna_gomes@yahoo.com.br Conclusion: The development of this study found that nursing professionals involved in mental health services had various types of workloads in their work process, being psychic as the most present. From this study, it is observed the need of a better attention to the existing working conditions in mental health services, searching for solutions that provide occupational health and safety for workers. Keywords Nursing Team; Worker s Health; Workloads; Mental Health Services. Under License of Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License This article is available at: www.intarchmed.com and www.medbrary.com 1

Introduction The health work involves a collective practice that aims to promote the health of people, their families, and community. It works by the relationships among professionals in the health services and society, permeated by technical and interpersonal actions. Therefore, it must be understood in its objectivity and subjectivity way [1]. The dynamics of the health work has been determinant for the development of workloads among workers. Workloads constitute the elements of the work process that dynamically interact with each other and with the worker s body, triggering changes in the health and disease process. They is classified into external materiality loads (physical, chemical, biological and mechanical) and internal materiality loads (physiological and psychological) [2]. The workloads in the work processes are not only added, but they potentiate and give consistency to the production process, characterizing it specifically, and may incur in the event of accidents and/or work-related diseases and also to impair the quality of assistance and consequently the safety of the patient. [3,4] The international literature [5] shows that the term patient safety involves, in general, to prevent errors in the care and elimination of damage to patients for such errors. The error in health care results from unintentional actions caused by some problem or failure during patient care and may be made by any member of the team and occurring at any time in the care process. The focused debate on the association between the nursing staff workload and patient safety is one of the most persistent themes in health, mobilizing resources from the World Health Organization (WHO) [6] and nursing organizations worldwide. Despite there are efforts to investigate the implications of nursing staff workload in patient safety, there are still many gaps in this area of knowledge. 2 There is an urgent need for studies addressing the extent and nature of nurses roles in improving patient safety [7]. In the psychiatric context the current situation of nursing work is characterized by the transition from care practice within the psychiatric hospital that aimed to user behavior containment of mental distress service for the incorporation of new principles, which seek to adapt to an interdisciplinary practice, open to the contingencies of the subjects involved in each moment and in each context, overcoming the disciplinary perspective of their actions, this new perspective comes up with the Brazilian Psychiatric Reform. To contributed and join efforts for continuous improvement of nursing care in mental health services and aimed at quality and safety, the development of research addressing this theme will discuss and strengthen communication between health professionals and ensure safety in the environment of the mental health services. Also, it provides improved decision-making; a care process aimed at more reliable professional practices [8]. Despite efforts towards to investigate the implications of the workload nursing team in patient safety, yet remain many gaps in this area of knowledge. There is an urgent need for studies addressing the extension and nature of nurses roles in improving patient safety In this sense, the question is what the current literature to bring the workload of nursing professionals and what are the impacts of these loads to the safety of patients in mental distress? Thus, this study aimed to identify the theoretical production about the workload of nursing professionals, evaluating the results of these studies to identify effects of these loads for the safety of patients in mental distress. The objective is to contribute to research that put in evidence the harmfulness of workloads for the mental and physical health of nursing professionals working in mental health services and the possible This article is available at: www.intarchmed.com and www.medbrary.com

consequences for the quality of care and consequent safety of the patients in mental distress. Method The integrative review is a research method that allows establishing a synthesis and general conclusions regarding a particular study area, performed in a systematic and orderly way to contribute to the knowledge investigated. This type of evaluation should follow the same methodological standards of the original research, considering the aspects of clarity, so that the reader can identify the actual characteristics of the selected studies and offer subsidies to the advancement of nursing in the context of mental health. [9] This research method includes six phases: theme identification or guiding question; sampling or searching the literature; categorization of studies; assessment of included studies; interpretation of results and synthesis of knowledge evidenced in analyzed articles [10]. The literature search took place between January and March, by the following databases: Latin America and the Caribbean Literature (LILACS), Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Scopus (Elsevier), National Library of Medicine - PUBMED ScienceDirect (Elsevier), Web of Figure 1: Synthesis of the extraction process in the databases, searching in, PUBMED, LILACS, SCIENCE DIRECT, WEB OF SCIENCE and CINAHL. Natal-RN,. Articles identified in the consulted databases (N= 12,293) 4,252 PUBMED 1,030 LILACS 568 Science Direct 4,091 Web Of Science 1,235 CINAHL 1,117 #1AND#2 = 887 #1AND#3 = 1.578 #1AND#4 = 825 #2AND#3 = 220 #2AND#4 = 586 #3AND#4 = 156 #1AND#2 = 77 #1AND#3 = 352 #1AND#4 = 142 #2AND#3 = 124 #2AND#4 = 192 #3AND#4 = 143 #1AND#2 = 233 #1AND#3 = 14 #1AND#4 = 84 #2AND#3 = 57 #2AND#4 = 176 #3AND#4 = 04 #1AND#2 = 1.255 #1AND#3 = 965 #1AND#4 = 799 #2AND#3 = 430 #2AND#4 = 408 #3AND#4 = 234 #1AND#2 = 113 #1AND#3 = 560 #1AND#4 = 75 #2AND#3 = 114 #2AND#4 = 280 #3AND#4 = 93 #1AND#2 = 301 #1AND#3 =363 #1AND#4 = 239 #2AND#3 = 60 #2AND#4 = 124 #3AND#4 = 30 1ª Exclusion Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria and articles aimed at the theme on workloads, focused on mental health services (N= 11.998) Reading in full of the selected material (n = 295) 116 PUBMED 37 LILACS 44 Science Direct 32 Web Of Science 36 CINAHL 30 Final Sample = (n= 08) Under License of Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License 3

Science (Main Collection - Thomson Reuters Scientific). To search in the databases, the descriptors used were found in Medical SubjectHeadings (MeSH): 1# ( nursing staff ) 2# ( worker health ), 3# ( workloads ), 4# ( mental health services ). The Crossing were performed using the Boolean operator AND: #1 AND #2, #1 AND #3, #1 AND #4, #2 AND #3, #2 AND #4 e #3 AND #4. Inclusion criteria were: full articles available on selected databases that show workloads that nursing professionals are exposed in their work process in hospital mental health services. Editorials, letters to the editor, abstracts, reviews expert opinion, were excluded, correspondence, reviews, book chapters, theses and dissertations and articles that do not address the issue. The studies were pre-selected with an attentive reading of the titles and abstracts to identify whether they were related to the main issue of the review, and the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Then they were excluded repeated articles in the databases, and text reading was carried out in full. There were 12,293 results identified in the databases. After selection of the inclusion and exclusion criteria and articles that do not address the topic from the perspective of workloads, there were 295 studies focusing on health services (Figure 1) distributed by databases as follows: (116); PUB- MED (37); LILACS (44); SCIENCE DIRECT (32); WEB OF SCIENCE (36); CINAHL (30). The analysis of the full text was made and all duplicated were removed. After reading, the final sample was composed of 08 studies. Results and Discussion The productions of this study are shown in the table below, identifying the journal, year of publication, databases, title, classification of study based on objectives, authors, location of the study and reason that causes the workload (Table 1). In Table 1, it is possible to show that regular nursing area was the most reported work on the theme. From the classification of studies based on the objectives, it is found that 62.5% (05) of the studies are descriptive, 37.5% (03) are cross- Table 1. Characterization of articles according to journal, year of publication, databases, title, classification of study based on objectives, authors, location of the study and reason that causes the workload. Natal-RN,. Article A1 Journal, Year of Publication and Database Rev. Latino-Am. Enfermage, 2013 PUBMED Title Care needs and workload required by institutionalized psychiatric patients. Classification of the Study Based on the Objectives Descriptive study with a quantitative Authors Location of the Study Helena Neuropsychiatric AyakoMukai. public Hospital Marli de Carvalho Jericó. Márcia Galan Perroca Reason that Causes the Workload Excessive work schedule in the psychiatric sector The average workload ranged from 119.6 to 183 hours A2 Rev. de Enfermagem da UERJ, 2015 Nursing workload in a psychiatric inpatient unit and workers health Descriptive study with a quantitative Souza et al Psychiatric hospital Physical and mental workloads Affected by the care of patients in psychiatric emergencies, insufficient human and material resources and reduced autonomy 4 This article is available at: www.intarchmed.com and www.medbrary.com

Article Journal, Year of Publication and Database Title Classification of the Study Based on the Objectives Authors Location of the Study Reason that Causes the Workload A3 Rev. Acta Paul Enferm. 2015 Work process and its impact on mental health nursing professionals Cross-sectional study with a quantitative Souza et al Specialised mental health service to provide comprehensive care for users of alcohol and other drugs Burden Multiple functions and dense workday Psychiatric burden mental exhaustion, verbal aggression, physical aggression fear and sexual aggression A4 Journal of Advanced Nursing, 2004 Stressors, burnout, and social support: nurses in acute mental health settings. A descriptive study of quantitative Richard Jenkins Peter Elliott Psychiatric hospital Physical and mental workloads Lack of qualified personnel in service to help in psychiatric nursing care; Stress and Burnout A5 International Journal of Nursing Studies 2013 Impacts of unit-level nurse practice environment, workload and burnout on nurse-reported outcomes in psychiatric hospitals: A multilevel modeling Cross-sectional study with a quantitative Bogaert Psychiatric hospital Workload It was associated with Burnout A6 Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing. 2012 Investigating the impact of psychosocial risks and occupational stress on psychiatric hospital nurses mental well-being in Japan Cross-sectional study with a quantitative S. Leka, J. Hassard, A. Yanagida Psychiatric hospital Workload High psychological job demands. A7 Rev Latino-am Enfermagem 2008 Study on the absenteeism of nursing professionals in a psychiatric center in Manaus, Brazil Descriptive study with a quantitative Sandra Greice Becker Maria Luiza Carvalho de Oliveira Psychiatric hospital Workload High demand for labor and illness reasons Under License of Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License 5

Article A8 Journal, Year of Publication and Database Rev Latino-am Enfermagem 2006 LILACS Title Psychiatric nursing work and workers' health problems Classification of the Study Based on the Objectives Descriptive study with a qualitative Authors Marissol Bastos de Carvalho anda Elisa Andres Felli Location of the Study Psychiatric hospital Reason that Causes the Workload Workload Physical loads exposure to poor lighting and humidity Physiological loads physical effort, time standing during the workday, weight handling and the distance traveled by the institution. Biological loads exposure to parasite infestation and contact with human bodily fluids. Mechanical loads physical aggression committed by patients. Psychic loads fear of being physically assaulted and the threats of physical violence made by psychiatric patients Source: Authors Databases (). 6 sectional studies. The descriptive research showed a description of relevant characteristics of a population or phenomenon studied, and there are relationships between variables. The methodological analysis showed that 07 studies (87.5%) have a quantitative, and 01 (12.5%) have a qualitative. Of them, 8 (100%) of the studies were conducted in a psychiatric hospital. Concerning the quantitative, its collection, and processing of information statistics show that it accurately tests hypotheses for research and provides indices that can be compared with others [11]. In this study, the types of workloads were: physical workloads demonstrated by excessive working hours and expressed by exposure to poor lighting and humidity; psychic workloads by the direct care to patients in psychiatric emergencies and lack of qualified personnel in service to help in psychiatric nursing care, stress and burnout; physiological workloads due to physical effort, time standing during the workday, weight handling and the distance traveled by the institution; biological workloads due to exposure to parasite infestation and contact with human bodily fluids, mechanical workloads caused by physical assaults committed by psychiatric patients. This study demonstrated that the psychic workloads were mainly responsible for the emotional charge of professionals and poor working conditions contribute to intensify these problems. A study [12] conducted with nursing professionals working in mental health services showed that 75% of nurses said they were moderately overloaded due to the care given to patients. In the same context, the workload related to the physical structure (19.4%), the dynamics of travel and work (13.9%), mental exhaustion (13.8%), fear of physical aggression (11 1%) and verbal abuse (11.1%) of patients were identified. Research [13] conducted with 69 psychiatric nurses working in a hospital service to the Irish community revealed that the main causes of burnout This article is available at: www.intarchmed.com and www.medbrary.com

were lack of resources, workload and organizational/process structures. Converging on the findings of this study, research [14] held examined the workload of nursing staff and its potential relationship to patient safety in hospitals showing significant associations between workload and patient safety, increased load work or number of patients by nursing staff, reducing the patient s satisfaction with the care received. Measuring workloads that health workers are exposed and promoting adequate dimension of nursing staff will contribute to improved quality of care. Lack of resources at work such as personnel, material or physically associated with the perception of poor conditions of service is an important stressor for these professionals since it can limit their action, influencing directly on the quality of service [15]. For that, the mental health services should combine physical resources to the demands of work, decreasing the workload of the nursing team [16]. From the critical analysis of the selected studies, articles were categorized by the similarity of content and a category for analysis was built: Implications of workloads for the safety of the patients in mental distress. Implications of workloads for the safety of the patients in mental distress The common reality in the activity of professionals from psychiatric hospitals is marked by physical, emotional and mental stress generated by work and can produce apathy, depression, emotional hypersensitivity, anger, irritability and anxiety and even cause depersonalization and the resulting inertia production, performance and employee satisfaction decrease [17]. Mental suffering of workers who are included in hospital services mental health can cause various morbidities with structural determinations. A study [18,19] conducted with health professionals to identify organizationally and personal factors causing professional engagement and occupational stress of nursing and other health team professionals revealed that workload, mental health and job satisfaction were correlated with the energy to work. The managers of mental health services must seek to ensure improvements in the working conditions of nurses, with implementation of individual and collective coping strategies, with a view to mental health promotion worker in his working environment. The quality of psychic well-being of the worker may have direct relation to safety in the care of patients, and the risk-free and damage in the process of health care [20]. However, given the problems identified in this study on the professional nursing workloads are exposed to mental health services, the safety of psychiatric patients is worrying. In 2004, The World Health Organization - WHO launched the World Alliance for Patient Safety. The program includes strategies, guidelines, and international goals, which aim to disseminate and ensure practices that enable patient safety in different countries. The Alliance operates in different areas, from hand washing, safe surgery to taxonomy, which aims at organizing the taxonomic aspects related to patient safety and care quality provided [21, 22]. Donabedian [23], one of the leading scholars of the health quality, developed a fundamental conceptual framework for understanding the evaluation of health quality, from the concepts of structure, process, and outcome, classically considered a triad, which is the concepts of General Systems Theory: input-process-output. In this context of quality of care, responsible for the management of patient care, the nurse plays an important role in achieving the quality of health services [24]. He contributes significantly to the construction of quality of care indicators and keeps up the results and the quality improvement process. In mental health services, the promotion of safety culture with an emphasis on learning, organizational improvement, and secure systems should be achieved. The mental health services managers need to implement policies to promote mental health for the worker in the workplace, as well as sensitize Under License of Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License 7

them as the coping outside the work environment, with the adoption of sports and family life, among others. Other indicators of workloads also need to be corrected as the decrease in weekly hourly load and increasing the number of workers in the nursing team, as the organizational aspects also play a significant role in the burnout of the worker. Organizational solutions such as increasing the number of nurses, reducing the number of hours worked positively impact the perception of work overload [25]. If the workload is not excessive, and professionals feel emotionally balanced and resolute in their professional activity, there will be greater satisfaction in their daily working day [12]. The efforts of health organizations to improve the quality of management need to mobilize pursuing patient safety and finding ways to work together more effectively and efficiently to ensure that their organizations provide safe, and high-quality care to patients [26]. Conclusions The development of this study found that nursing professionals involved in mental health services had various types of workloads in their work process, being psychic as the most present. The main causes of workload generation identified in the study are: physical assaults committed by patients in mental distress, excessive working hours, high demand for psychological work, working hours and working conditions with reference to the work overload. Workloads identified are associated with the specifics of work in the hospital mental health services, which require the skills of workers to deal with the human being, in order to understand it from the perspective of comprehensive health care, mainly because dealing with the everyday suffering and madness, which makes the environment pervaded by intense the subjective and intersubjective. In the care of the caregiver context of users with mental suffering, more studies are needed in order 8 to contribute to the professional development of coping strategies to work situations, both individual and organizational point of view. References 1. Glanzner CH, Olschowsky A, Kantorski LP. O trabalho como fonte de prazer: avaliação da equipe de um Centro de Atenção Psicossocial. Rev. esc. enferm. USP São Paulo, v. 45, n. 3, p. 716-721, June 2011. 2. Secco IAO de.,robazzi MLCC de., Souza FEA de., Shimizu DS. Cargas de trabalho de materialidade externa na equipe de enfermagem de hospital de ensino do Paraná, Brasil. Rev. Ciencia y EnfermerIa XVII (3): 69-81, 2011 3. Laurell AC, Noriega M. Processo de produção e saúde: trabalho e desgaste operário. São Paulo: Hucitec; 1989 4. Magalhães AMM, Dall Agnol CM, Marck PB. Carga de trabalho da equipe de enfermagem e segurança do paciente - estudo com método misto na abordagem ecológica restaurativa. Rev. Latino-Am. Enfermagem 21(Spec):[09 telas] 5. Kohn LT, Corrigan JM, Donaldson MS, editors. To error is human: building a safer health system. Washington (DC): Committee on Quality of Health Care in America, National Academy, Institute of Medicine; 2001. 6. World Health Organization (WHO). World alliance for patient safety. [Internet]. Washington DC; 2004 [acesso 8 fev ]. Disponível em: http://www.who.int/patientsafety/enf 7. Richardson A, Storr J. Patient safety: a literature review on the impact of nursing empowerment, leadership and collaboration. IntNurs Rev. 2010 Jun; 57(2):12-21. 8. Richardson A, Storr J. Patient safety: a literature review on the impact of nursing empowerment, leadership and collaboration. Int Nurs Rev. 2010 Jun; 57(2):12-21. 9. Whittemore R, Knafl K. The integrative review: update methodology. J AdvNurs. 2005 Dez; 52(5):546-53. Ganong LH. Integrative reviews of nursing research. Res Nurs Health. 1987 Mar; 10(1):1-11. 10. Souza MTS, Silva, MD, Carvalho R. Revisao integrativa: o que e como fazer. Einstein [Internet]. 2010[cited Abril 5]; 8(1):102-6. Available from: http://apps.einstein.br/revista/ arquivos/pdf/1134-einsteinv8n1_p102-106_port.pdf 11. Dalfovo MS, Lana RA, Silveira A. Métodos quantitativos e qualitativos: um resgateteórico. Revista Interdisciplinar Científica Aplicada, Blumenau 2008; 2(4): 01-13. 12. Souza IA, Pereira MO, Oliveira MA, Pinho PH, Gonçalves RM. Processo de trabalho e seu impacto nos profissionais de enfermagem em serviço de saúde mental. Rev Acta Paul Enferm. 2015; 28(5):447-53 This article is available at: www.intarchmed.com and www.medbrary.com

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