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Volume 3
Advanced Practices in Nursing
ISSN: 2573-0347
Advanced Nursing Research 2018
June 14-15, 2018
June 14-15, 2018 | Dublin, Ireland
48
th
World Congress on
Advanced Nursing Research
Nursing students’ sleep patterns and perceptions of safe practice
Lois James
Washington State University, USA
Statement of the Problem:
Nursing students make an abrupt transition from traditional classes into clinical rotations and shift
work. Understanding student nurses’ initial sleep patterns in response to clinical rotations can yield insights into opportunities
for occupational interventions at the university and hospital level. The purpose of this project was to describe students’ sleep
patterns and perceptions of safe practice during their first semester of clinical rotations.
Methodology:
We measured the sleep of 19 full-time J2 nursing students before, during, and after their first clinical rotations.
Sleep was measured objectively using wrist activity monitors (actigraphy) and sleepiness was measured using sleep diaries for
seven consecutive days at each time period. During these same time periods we used Bandura’s self-efficacy scales to measure
students’ perceptions of safe practice. We then used multi-level-modeling (MLM) to explore associations between students’
sleep, sleepiness, and their perceptions of safe practice.
Findings:
Nursing students’ sleep quantity did not differ across time periods; they consistently received approximately 7 hours
and 20 minutes per night. The number of students reporting sleepiness however increased from 29% before rotations, to 32%
during rotations, to 39% after rotations. Furthermore, students assigned to night shift rotations had lower self-efficacy scores
than students assigned to day shift rotations (82% vs. 87%). Finally, within individual students, feeling sleepy significantly
predicted lower safe-practice self-efficacy scores (
f
=42.55;
df
=1.60;
p
<.001).
Conclusion & Significance:
Our results reveal that sleepiness significantly degrades student confidence in their ability to
perform safe nursing practice. Our work addresses a gap in the total worker health (TWH) research by examining a critical
period in the professional development of nurses, and helps to guide occupational interventions—particularly those targeted
towards reducing nursing student sleepiness.
Biography
Lois James is an Assistant Professor at the WSU College of Nursing. She has a BA in Psychology from Trinity College Dublin, and received her PhD in Criminal Justice
from WSU in 2011. During her time at WSU, she has brought in approximately $3,000,000 of extramural funding as PI or Co-PI. She focuses on the relationship between
sleep, health, and performance in elite populations such as nurses, combat medics, military personnel, police officers, and top tier athletes. Through understanding the
prevalence and impact of sleep deprivation and circadian disruption within these populations she creates fatigue management strategies to help build resilience and reduce
the risk of performance deficits and chronic health issues. Examples of these strategies are shift-work related fatigue management plans for police officers and nurses, and
jet lag management plans for athletes competing overseas.
Lois_james@wsu.eduLois James, Adv Practice Nurs 2018, Volume 3
DOI: 10.4172/2573-0347-C2-020