Imagine a nurse who is so tired they might miss a warning sign or drop a heavy patient. This is a common reality in healthcare where fatigue is a silent danger. A new systematic review examined whether fixing the environment and the workday can actually stop these injuries before they happen. The study focused on nurses in settings where exhaustion is a known risk, looking at a wide range of solutions rather than just one magic pill.
The researchers found that a mix of strategies works best. This includes smart scheduling that protects rest time, engineering solutions like better lifting equipment to handle patients safely, and team habits like taking microbreaks and speaking up about tiredness without fear. These approaches aim to tackle the root causes of exhaustion rather than just treating the symptoms.
However, the path forward is not simple. The study highlights that putting these plans into action is hard when hospitals lack the money or staff to support them. Other hurdles include too many alarms to ignore, a workplace culture that doesn't always prioritize safety, and the difficulty of comparing data from different hospitals. Because of these challenges, the results show that preventing injury needs a full team effort that fits the specific context of every healthcare unit.