TY - JOUR
T1 - Nurse Staffing Configurations and Sickness Absence in English ICUs: A Longitudinal Observational Study
AU - Nwanosike, Ezekwesiri
AU - Dall’Ora, Chiara
AU - Griffiths, Peter
AU - Saville, Christina
AU - Monks, Thomas
AU - Pattison, Natalie
AU - Yapa, Tolusha Dahanayake
N1 - © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
PY - 2025/12/31
Y1 - 2025/12/31
N2 - Background: Staff wellbeing in intensive care units is essential for quality patient care, and nurse
staffing configurations can impact nurse sickness absence. The COVID-19 pandemic imposed
additional strain on nurses, potentially affecting sickness absence rates.
Objective: To examine the association between registered nurse staffing levels, skill mix, and staff
sickness absence in intensive care units spanning prepandemic (01/19–02/20), early pandemic
(03/20–02/21), later pandemic (03/21–02/22), and post-pandemic (03/22–12/22).
Design: Longitudinal retrospective study
Setting(s): Three National Health Service hospital trusts in England
Participants: Five intensive care units with 6916 sickness episodes from staffing data.
Methods: We linked staffing data from electronic rostering systems. Variables included registered
nurse hours per patient day, proportion of senior staff nurses with largely hands-on clinical
experience, management presence, and sickness absence rates. Generalised linear mixed models
analysed associations between staffing configurations in the previous 28 days and sickness
absence.
Results: The mean sickness absences rate was 2.4 %. When analysing all time periods collectively,
an increase in registered nurse staffing by 1 standard deviation (SD) (11.0 h per patient day) was
associated with a 5 % reduction in sickness episodes (incidence rate ratio [IRR]=0.95; 95 %
confidence interval [CI] 0.90–0.99, p = 0.018); a 1 SD (15.1 %) increase in the proportion of
senior nurse hours per patient day was associated with a 22 % reduction in sickness episodes
(IRR=0.78; 95 % CI 0.71–0.86; p < 0.001). For management, the relationship exhibited a non-linear pattern, with both higher and lower levels of managerial presence, compared to the
norm, being associated with increased sickness absence. The observed relationships changed over time, especially during later and post-pandemic periods. A 1 SD (11.7 h per patient day) increase
in registered nurse staffing was associated with a 19 % reduction in sickness absence in the post-pandemic period (IRR 0.81; 95 % CI 0.69–0.95, p = 0.010). A 1 SD increase in proportion of
senior nurse hours per patient day was associated with both reduced (IRR 0.60; 95 % CI
0.48–0.74, p < 0.001 later pandemic) and increased sickness absence (IRR 2.00; 95 % CI
1.31–3.05, p = 0.001 post pandemic).
Conclusions: Sickness absence in intensive care units decreased with higher registered nurse
staffing levels, although this relationship was most apparent post-pandemic. The presence of more
senior registered nurses was generally associated with reduced sickness absence, although this
relationship proved complex and varied across time periods. Pandemic conditions appear to have
altered typical staffing-sickness patterns, with staff sickness being less influenced by workload
during the acute pandemic phase.
Social media abstract: Study of English intensive care units finds more senior nurses & higher
staffing levels linked to reduced sickness absence—key for patient care quality!
AB - Background: Staff wellbeing in intensive care units is essential for quality patient care, and nurse
staffing configurations can impact nurse sickness absence. The COVID-19 pandemic imposed
additional strain on nurses, potentially affecting sickness absence rates.
Objective: To examine the association between registered nurse staffing levels, skill mix, and staff
sickness absence in intensive care units spanning prepandemic (01/19–02/20), early pandemic
(03/20–02/21), later pandemic (03/21–02/22), and post-pandemic (03/22–12/22).
Design: Longitudinal retrospective study
Setting(s): Three National Health Service hospital trusts in England
Participants: Five intensive care units with 6916 sickness episodes from staffing data.
Methods: We linked staffing data from electronic rostering systems. Variables included registered
nurse hours per patient day, proportion of senior staff nurses with largely hands-on clinical
experience, management presence, and sickness absence rates. Generalised linear mixed models
analysed associations between staffing configurations in the previous 28 days and sickness
absence.
Results: The mean sickness absences rate was 2.4 %. When analysing all time periods collectively,
an increase in registered nurse staffing by 1 standard deviation (SD) (11.0 h per patient day) was
associated with a 5 % reduction in sickness episodes (incidence rate ratio [IRR]=0.95; 95 %
confidence interval [CI] 0.90–0.99, p = 0.018); a 1 SD (15.1 %) increase in the proportion of
senior nurse hours per patient day was associated with a 22 % reduction in sickness episodes
(IRR=0.78; 95 % CI 0.71–0.86; p < 0.001). For management, the relationship exhibited a non-linear pattern, with both higher and lower levels of managerial presence, compared to the
norm, being associated with increased sickness absence. The observed relationships changed over time, especially during later and post-pandemic periods. A 1 SD (11.7 h per patient day) increase
in registered nurse staffing was associated with a 19 % reduction in sickness absence in the post-pandemic period (IRR 0.81; 95 % CI 0.69–0.95, p = 0.010). A 1 SD increase in proportion of
senior nurse hours per patient day was associated with both reduced (IRR 0.60; 95 % CI
0.48–0.74, p < 0.001 later pandemic) and increased sickness absence (IRR 2.00; 95 % CI
1.31–3.05, p = 0.001 post pandemic).
Conclusions: Sickness absence in intensive care units decreased with higher registered nurse
staffing levels, although this relationship was most apparent post-pandemic. The presence of more
senior registered nurses was generally associated with reduced sickness absence, although this
relationship proved complex and varied across time periods. Pandemic conditions appear to have
altered typical staffing-sickness patterns, with staff sickness being less influenced by workload
during the acute pandemic phase.
Social media abstract: Study of English intensive care units finds more senior nurses & higher
staffing levels linked to reduced sickness absence—key for patient care quality!
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijnsa.2025.100451
DO - 10.1016/j.ijnsa.2025.100451
M3 - Article
SN - 2666-142X
VL - 9
JO - International Journal of Nursing Studies Advances
JF - International Journal of Nursing Studies Advances
M1 - 100451
ER -