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Journal Article

Citation

Sיhafran Tikva S, Gabay G, Shkoler O, Kagan I. Isr. J. Health Policy Res. 2024; 13(1): e22.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/s13584-024-00601-3

PMID

38659017

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Violence against nurses is common. Previous research has recommended further development of the measurement of violence against nurses and integration of the individual and ward-related factors that contribute to violence against hospital nurses. This study was designed to address these issues by investigating the associations between violence, the listening climate of hospital wards, professional burnout, and perceived quality of care. For this purpose, we used a new operationalization of the violence concept.

METHODS: We sought nurses to participate in the study through social media which yielded 765 nurses working in various healthcare systems across Israel who volunteered to complete a self-administered online questionnaire. 80% of the sample were hospital nurses, and 84.7% were female. The questionnaire included validated measures of burnout, listening climate, and quality of care. Instead of using the traditional binary measure of exposure to violence to capture the occurrence and comprehensive impact of violence, this study measured the incremental load of violence to which nurses are subjected.

RESULTS: There were significant correlations between violence load and perceived quality of care and between constructive and destructive listening climates and quality of care. Violence load contributed 14% to the variance of burnout and 13% to the variance of perceived quality of care. The ward listening climate moderated the relationship between burnout and quality of care.

CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study highlight the impact of violence load among nurses and the ward listening climate on the development of burnout and on providing quality care. The findings call upon policymakers to monitor violence load and allocate resources to foster supportive work environments to enhance nurse well-being and improve patient care outcomes.


Language: en

Keywords

*Burnout, Professional/psychology; *Quality of Health Care/standards; Adult; Burnout; Female; Humans; Israel; Listening climate; Male; Middle Aged; Nurses; Nursing Care/psychology/methods; Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology/statistics & numerical data; Patient; Quality of care; Surveys and Questionnaires; Violence load; Violence/psychology/statistics & numerical data; Workplace Violence/psychology/statistics & numerical data; Workplace/psychology/standards

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