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Can Sleep Quality and Burnout Affect Shift-Work Nurses’ Job Performance?

11/22/2017

In a Journal of Advanced Nursing study, female gender and personal burnout were linked with impaired sleep quality among nurses.

In a Journal of Advanced Nursing study, female gender and personal burnout were linked with impaired sleep quality among nurses.

Also, working in the psychiatric setting, working a long cycle shift pattern, and experiencing daytime dysfunction were associated with burnout.

A significant negative association between patient-related burnout and job performance was also observed.

Additional Information

Link to Study: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jan.13484/full

About Journal

The Journal of Advanced Nursing (JAN) contributes to the advancement of evidence-based nursing, midwifery and healthcare by disseminating high quality research and scholarship of contemporary relevance and with potential to advance knowledge for practice, education, management or policy.

All JAN papers are required to have a sound scientific, evidential, theoretical or philosophical base and to be critical, questioning and scholarly in approach.  As an international journal, JAN promotes diversity of research and scholarship in terms of culture, paradigm and healthcare context.  For JAN’s worldwide readership, authors are expected to make clear the wider international relevance of their work and to demonstrate sensitivity to cultural considerations and differences.

The majority of papers in JAN are written by nurses and midwives but there are no constraints on authorship as long as papers fit with the expressed Aims and Scope.

Penny Smith
Tel: +44 (0)1243 770448
sciencenewsroom@wiley.com

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