Majority of nurses and midwives concerned about patient safety in their workplaces

The INMO has today published the results of its 2024 member survey, revealing that nurses and midwives are concerned about how patient safety is being negatively impacted by staffing shortfalls, and that significant numbers have considered leaving their workplaces due to high levels of stress. 

The union’s 2024 survey shows that 76% of respondents stated that their current staffing levels and skill mix did not meet the required clinical and patient demands in their work area, with 92% of those expressing concern that patient safety was at risk.

More than half of respondents (54%) stated that they felt under pressure from their workplace to work additional hours/shifts, with 15% stating they worked more than 20 additional unpaid hours per month. 

As in previous years, the INMO survey aimed to capture the proportion of nurses and midwives who intended to leave their professions, or their workplaces. In response to this, 63% of respondents stated that they had considered leaving their work area over the last month, and of those 44.54% said this was mainly due to workplace stress.

The union also surveyed members on issues such as health and wellbeing, and their experiences of Long COVID, with responses revealing that more than 1 in 5 nurses and midwives (21.39%) stating they had attended their GP due to work-related stress and 1 in 8 respondents (12.57%) stated they had or had previously had Long COVID.

 

INMO President Karen McGowan said:

These results very clearly show that nurses and midwives are struggling in today’s health service. 

More than four years on from the start of the COVID pandemic, INMO members are still dealing with the effects in their workplaces, in their practise, and in their own health. Meanwhile the government has failed to make progress on hospital overcrowding, and conditions for staff and patients in many places has gotten far worse than we could have imagined.

Not only is this situation not sustainable, but it is painfully clear from these survey results that the Irish health service and its staff are not in a position to ensure another crisis. These services and the people working in them, are hanging by a thread, and it’s frightening to think what would happen if they had to withstand another serious shock.

 

INMO general secretary Phil Ní Sheaghdha said:

 Every year our members fulfil their duty with regard to their patients and the services they provide, by raising the pressing issues that need to be addressed, and demonstrating the impact of inaction on their services and their patients. Year after year, they find that they are not being met halfway. 

We have clear data on the impact of unsafe staffing on patient outcomes; we have data on the relationship between overcrowding and whether or not patients will survive; and here we have clear figures saying nurses and midwives are extremely stressed, working unpaid hours, and leaving their jobs. The failure to act on very clear data is simply irresponsible. 

INMO members know  cannot increase bed capacity or staffing quotas. They have reached the end of what they themselves can do to improve the services, and it is up to the government and the HSE to bring about these changes, or risk a collapse in the numbers of staff who are willing to work in Ireland, and catastrophic patient outcomes as a result. 

 

 

ENDS

 

Notes to Editors

 

Safe Staffing

  • 76.41% of respondents stated that their current staffing levels and skill mix did not meet the required clinical and patient demands in their work area.  
  • Of the participants who reported that the staffing levels and skill mix were inadequate to meet the clinical and patient demand, 92.29% expressed concern that patient safety was at risk. 

Experience in the workplace

·        53.98% of respondents stated that they felt under pressure from their workplace to work additional hours/shifts. 

  • Only 6.92% of respondents said that they always left their shift on time. 
  • 66.99% of respondents indicated that they had worked additional unpaid hours over their contracted hours of employment over the last 12 months. 
  • Of those, 61.22% worked between 1 and 5 or 1 and 10 hours unpaid each month, and 15.10% worked more than 20 hours.  

Wellbeing

  • 69.09% of respondents reported that their work was impacting their physical health. 
  • Over half of the respondents (54.56%) said that they always or very often felt physically exhausted.
  • 41.07% of respondents believed that your work negatively impacts their psychological wellbeing. 

Burnout

  • 56.46% of respondents stated that their work was emotionally exhausting to a high or very high degree. 
  • 48.55% of respondents felt burnt out because of work to a very high degree or to a high degree. 
  • 70.42% of respondents stated that they felt worn out at the end of the working day to a high degree to very high degree. 
  • 51.44% of respondents stated they felt exhausted in the morning at the thought of another day at work to a high degree to a very high degree. 
  • 37.54% of respondents stated that they felt that every working hour was tiring for them

 

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