WEDNESDAY, Jan. 25 (HealthDay News) -- Nurses who work long hours
and have less physically demanding jobs are much more likely to be obese
than other nurses, according to a new study.
Researchers from the University of Maryland School of Nursing surveyed
about 2,100 female nurses and found that about 55 percent of them were
obese. They determined that nursing schedules affect nurses' health and
also the quality of patient care.
"Long work hours and shift work adversely affect quantity and quality
of sleep, which often interferes with adherence to healthy behavior and
increases obesity," said the study's lead researcher, Kihye Han, a
postdoctoral fellow at the nursing school, in a university news
release.
Han said the findings -- published recently in the Journal of
Nursing Administration -- support the need to change the common
12-hour nursing shift. The researchers added that hospitals and other
health care facilities should offer educational programs on how to adapt
to work schedules, deal with sleep deprivation and reduce fatigue.
"Considering that more than half of nurses are overweight or obese,
increasing availability of healthy food and providing sufficient time to
consume it may reduce the risk of obesity and future health problems," Han
noted.
In a previous study, the researchers found that in terms of nursing
schedules, working long shifts and having too little time off were most
often related to the death of patients. A separate study also suggested
the 12-hour nursing shift can lead to sleep deprivation, health problems
and increased risk for errors in patient care.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more
information on
obesity .
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