Developing a simulation tool to quantify biomechanical load and quality of care in nursing

Ergonomics. 2023 Jul;66(7):886-903. doi: 10.1080/00140139.2022.2113921. Epub 2022 Aug 23.

Abstract

Nursing is a high musculoskeletal disorder (MSD) risk job with high workload demands. This study combines Digital Human Modelling (DHM) and Discrete Event Simulation (DES) to address the need for tools to better manage MSD risk. This novel approach quantifies physical-workload, work-performance, and quality-of-care, in response to varying geographical patient-bed assignments, patient-acuity levels, and nurse-patient ratios. Lumbar loads for 86 care-delivery tasks in an acute care hospital unit were used as inputs in a DES model of the care-delivery process, creating a shift-long time trace of the biomechanical load. Peak L4/L5 compression and moment were 3574 N and 111.58 Nm, respectively. This study reports trade-offs in all three experiments: (i) increasing geographical patient-bed assignment distance decreased L4/L5 compression (8.8%); (ii) increased patient-acuity decreased L4/L5 moment (4%); (iii) Increased nurse-patient ratio decreased L4/L5 compression (10%) and moment (17%). However, in all experiments, Quality of care indicators deteriorated (20, 19, and 29%, respectively).Practitioner Summary: This research has the potential to support decision-makers by developing a simulation tool that quantifies the impact of varying operational and design-policies in terms of biomechanical-load and quality of care. The demonstrator-model reports: as geographical patient-bed distance, patient-acuity levels, and nurse-patient ratios increase, biomechanical-load reduces, and quality of care deteriorates.

Keywords: Digital human modelling; MSD risk; discrete event simulation; healthcare ergonomics; human factors.

MeSH terms

  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Humans
  • Lumbar Vertebrae / physiology
  • Lumbosacral Region
  • Musculoskeletal Diseases*
  • Quality of Health Care
  • Range of Motion, Articular
  • Workload*