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High demand, high commitment work: What residential aged care staff actually do minute by minute: A participatory action study

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posted on 2024-07-03, 06:11 authored by D Gibson, Eileen WillisEileen Willis, E Merrick, B Redley, K Bail
This article explores staff work patterns in an Australian residential aged care facility and the implications for high-quality care. Rarely available minute by minute, time and motion, and ethnographic data demonstrate that nurses and care staff engage in high degrees of multitasking and mental switching between residents. Mental switching occurs up to 18 times per hour (every 3 min); multitasking occurs on average for 37 min/h. Labor process theory is used to examine these outcomes and to explore the concepts of high demand and high commitment as core components of work intensification. These conditions of work result in high levels of cognitive burden and stress on staff in managing the multitasking and mental switching, exacerbated by lack of knowledge about residents associated with labor force casualization. These new interpretations of data in relation to mental and manual labor can contribute to understanding, and, therefore, problem solving, in the aged care sector.

Funding

Category 2 - Other Public Sector Grants Category

History

Volume

30

Issue

3

Start Page

1

End Page

11

Number of Pages

11

eISSN

1440-1800

ISSN

1320-7881

Publisher

Wiley

Publisher License

CC BY-NC-ND

Additional Rights

CC-BY-NC-ND

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2022-12-05

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print-Electronic

Journal

Nursing Inquiry