Article

Why does work cause fatigue? A real-time investigation of fatigue, and determinants of fatigue in nurses working 12 hour shifts

Details

Citation

Johnston DW, Allan JL, Powell DJH, Jones MC, Farquharson B, Bell C & Johnston M (2019) Why does work cause fatigue? A real-time investigation of fatigue, and determinants of fatigue in nurses working 12 hour shifts. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 53 (6), pp. 551-562. https://doi.org/10.1093/abm/kay065

Abstract
Background One of the striking regularities of human behavior is that a prolonged physical, cognitive, or emotional activity leads to feelings of fatigue. Fatigue could be due to (1) depletion of a finite resource of physical and/or psychological energy or (2) changes in motivation, attention, and goal-directed effort (e.g. motivational control theory). Purpose To contrast predictions from these two views in a real-time study of subjective fatigue in nurses while working. Methods One hundred nurses provided 1,453 assessments over two 12-hr shifts. Nurses rated fatigue, demand, control, and reward every 90 min. Physical energy expenditure was measured objectively using Actiheart. Hypotheses were tested using multilevel models to predict fatigue from (a) the accumulated values of physical energy expended, demand, control, and reward over the shift and (b) from distributed lag models of the same variables over the previous 90 min. Results Virtually all participants showed increasing fatigue over the work period. This increase was slightly greater when working overnight. Fatigue was not dependent on physical energy expended nor perceived work demands. However, it was related to perceived control over work and perceived reward associated with work. Conclusions Findings provide little support for a resource depletion model; however, the finding that control and reward both predicted fatigue is consistent with a motivational account of fatigue.

Keywords
Control; Ecological momentary assessment; Fatigue; Motivation; Reward; Resource depletion, Control, Motivation, Fatigue, Reward, Resource depletion, WORKFORCE, NURSING TASKS, SELF-CONTROL, PERFORMANCE, MODEL, PREVALENCE, RECOVERY, EGO-DEPLETION, STRESS, MENTAL FATIGUE

Journal
Annals of Behavioral Medicine: Volume 53, Issue 6

StatusPublished
FundersChief Scientist Office
Publication date30/06/2019
Publication date online31/08/2018
Date accepted by journal24/07/2018
PublisherSpringer New York
ISSN0883-6612
eISSN1532-4796

People (2)

People

Professor Julia Allan

Professor Julia Allan

Professor in Psychology, Psychology

Dr Barbara Farquharson

Dr Barbara Farquharson

Associate Professor, NMAHP