Typical Workday on the Night Shift
On day shift, it might be easier to balance the workload throughout the day, as patients are mostly awake. However, on nights, nurses may have to bundle care in the beginning and end of their shifts to allow patients time to sleep in between. Â
Night nurses may also have to bundle care with ancillary staff to avoid frequent interruptions during the night. Night shift duties can vary based on the department a nurse works in. However, the workflow is often similar. Here’s a walk-through of a typical 12-hour-shift on nights.Â
Beginning of Shift (Hours 1-4)Â
- Receive report from the day shift nurse. Â
- Review orders, tests, labs, and vital signs. Â
- Perform head-to-toe assessments.Â
- Start medication passes as ordered. Â
- Complete pending patient discharges.Â
- Begin treatments (wound care, dressing changes, IV starts, etc.) as ordered. Â
- Review charts and anticipate any needs the patients may have throughout the night (call the physician for orders as needed).
Middle of Shift (Hours 5-8)Â
- Ensure that patients have received all night medications, including sleeping pills and pain medication.Â
- Assist patients with toileting, showering, and any other bedtime activities as needed. Â
- Encourage quiet time by dimming lights, keeping voices down, and anticipating when IV pumps and other equipment will alarm (or as per facility protocol). Â
- Start documentation (if not started already).Â
End of Shift (Hours 9-12)Â
- Start drawing blood for lab (or anticipate that phlebotomists will come to do so).Â
- Administer early morning medications.Â
- Assist patients with morning activities (toileting, bathing, other activities, etc.). Â
- Finish any documentation that was not completed.Â
- Give report to the day shift nurse.Â
Pros of Working Night Shift Hours
Less DistractionsÂ
There are typically fewer procedures, surgeries, tests, phone calls, and visitors on the night shift. Night shift nurses interact less often with other care team members, ancillary staff, management, and patients’ families, leaving more time with patients.
Stronger TeamworkÂ
Due to the minimal staff support available during nights, working a night shift may require nurses to depend on each other much more than they would if working on days.Â
Increased Pay PotentialÂ
Due to work-life balance challenges the night shift can bring, night shift nurses are often paid a higher salary than those on days. Night shift nurses can make more than $8,000 more per year than day shift nurses. Â
