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Journal Article

Citation

Ovayolu O, Ovayolu N, Karadag G. Workplace Health Saf. 2014; 62(9): 370-374.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, American Association of Occupational Health Nurses, Publisher SAGE Publications)

DOI

10.3928/21650799-20140804-04

PMID

25102477

Abstract

This research was designed to determine whether nurses are bullied by other staff members and the effects of such behaviors on the nurse victims. This study reports on nurses' interpersonal workplace relationships in a culturally unique environment. The study was conducted with 260 nurses working in three public hospitals. Data were collected using a questionnaire. The majority of nurses were female with bachelor's degrees and reported being assigned duties outside their usual responsibilities, held responsible for coworkers' mistakes, and criticized for job performance although they thought they had done their work properly. Most of the nurses who were bullied experienced health and sleep problems, did not want to go to work, and had communication problems with other staff members. Nearly all of the study nurses received psychological support to solve their problems and believed that the best way to prevent bullying was education. [Workplace Health Saf 20XX;XX(X):XX-XX.].


Language: en

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