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Nurses' experience with presenteeism and the potential consequences on patient safety: a qualitative study among nurses at out-of-hours emergency primary care facilities.

Moore A, Knutsen Glette M. Nurses’ experience with presenteeism and the potential consequences on patient safety: a qualitative study among nurses at out-of-hours emergency primary care facilities. BMJ Open. 2023;13(11):e076136. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-076136.

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January 10, 2024
Moore A, Knutsen Glette M. BMJ Open. 2023;13(11):e076136.
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Clinicians are often influenced by cultural or system factors to continue working despite illness or fatigue, known as presenteeism. This qualitative study including nurses at three out-of-hours primary care facilities in Norway found that work-related stress is a significant contributor to presenteeism. Although participants felt that presenteeism did not adversely impact patient safety, the authors note the need for more research using non-subjective reporting systems to better understand patient safety implications.

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Moore A, Knutsen Glette M. Nurses’ experience with presenteeism and the potential consequences on patient safety: a qualitative study among nurses at out-of-hours emergency primary care facilities. BMJ Open. 2023;13(11):e076136. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-076136.

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