Education Recommendations |
4.1 Occupational health and safety educational programs include formal and informal education sessions that address: a) recognizing and preventing fatigue; b) the factors that contribute to fatigue; c) the implications of nurse fatigue on patient safety, nurse well-being and organizational well-being; d) sleep hygiene; and e) utilizing self-assessment practices for fatigue. |
4.2 Academic Settings address the issue of nursing fatigue in the curriculum by: a) incorporating content related to nurse fatigue in the curriculum for nursing students, preceptors, professors and other educators; and b) establishing a method of evaluation that feeds back into the process to determine if student nurse fatigue and nursing faculty fatigue in the academic setting and workplace have been reduced. |
4.3 Organizations and academic settings: a) incorporate information regarding fatigue prevention and recognition strategies into orientation programs for staff, nursing students and preceptors; b) enhance leadership courses to address issues related to fatigue; and c) promote research to assist health-care organizations in implementing and evaluating strategies to address nurse fatigue. |