1.Workplace incivility among nurses in a national tertiary hospital.
Paul Froilan U. GARMA ; Maria Clarissa C. BRAGANZA ; Jewell Mari Ellaine DAVID ; Marivin Joy LIM ; Michelle DELA CRUZ ; Paul VELOSO
Philippine Journal of Nursing 2018;88(1):3-10
Incivility creates an environment of hostility among healthcare providers in the workplace, and undermines a culture of patient safety. Although this phenomenon is pervasive in the profession, nurses tolerate or ignore its occurrence due to inadequate knowledge, fear and lack of institutional policies. There are no empirical studies in the local context which explore incivility among nurses in the hospital setting. This study examined the sources and forms of incivility among nurses working in a hospital according to nurse-related variables. A descriptive, cross-sectional design was utilized. Respondents were asked to answer Nurse's Profile and Nursing Incivility Scale. A stratified random sampling was used. A sample of 280 nurses from different clinical nursing units in a national tertiary hospital completed the questionnaire. Incivility outcome was analyzed using One-way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) according to nurse-related variables such as nursing designation, practice setting, type of clinical nursing unit and length of hospital work experience. Post-hoc analysis was performed using Tukey's Honestly Significant Difference. Data were collected from September to October 2017.
Majority of the participants are female (78 %) and single (50 %) with an average age of 36 years old (SD= 9.96, range 21-62). They are employed in the hospital for an average of 9 years (SD = 8.82). Most of the sample works in general clinical nursing units (68 %) in a service/ charity setting (57 %). More than half of the respondents are staff nurses (67%) who provide direct care (Nurse I/II) followed by charge nurses (Nurse III) (19%) and head and chief nurses (IV/VI) (13%). Significant in civil interactions were reported between nurses and their colleagues at work, physicians and patients and their families according to the nursing designation, practice setting, type of clinical nursing unit and length of work experience. The moderately in civil interactions were exhibited in the forms of inconsistent behaviors, hostile climate and displaced frustrations. Nurse-related variables have significant impact on in civil interactions in the hospital setting. Understanding the sources and forms of incivility is of paramount importance in mitigating its impact on healthcare delivery and patient outcomes, and developing relevant policies and interventions that protect the welfare of nursing workforce.
Human ; Male ; Female ; Adult (a Person 19-44 Years Of Age) ; Interprofessional Relations ; Incivility
2.Rationing of nursing care and its relationship to nurse practice environment in a tertiary public hospital.
Reiner Lorenzo J. TAMAYO ; Maria Khrizalyn Faye QUINTIN-GUTIERREZ ; Mildred B. CAMPO ; Marivin Joy F. LIM ; Peter T. LABUNI
Acta Medica Philippina 2022;56(3):64-71
Objectives: The purpose of the study is to determine the level of rationing of nursing care and its relationship to nurses' perception of their practice environment.
Methods: The study employed a descriptive, cross-sectional study design. The Basel Extent of Rationing of Nursing Care (BERNCA) was administered to assess the level of care rationing while the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index (PES-NWI) was used to describe nurses' practice environment. A total of 147 nurses participated in the study. Multiple regression analysis was conducted to determine the effect of various respondent characteristics and nurse practice environment on care rationing.
Results: Only practice environment total score was significantly associated with rationing of care total scores (B = -0.20, p < 0.05). Results of the regression show that for every unit increase in nurse practice environment total score, indicating a better work environment, there is a 0.20 unit decrease in rationing of nursing care total score, which indicated less rationing of care. Respondent characteristics are not significantly related.
Conclusion: Nurses most frequently rationed tasks in the areas of caring/support and monitoring. The less frequently rationed tasks involved medical, technical, and therapeutic aspects of care. The identification of rationing predictors can aid in determining starting points for hospital policy reforms. Prevalence levels can indicate when care rationing exceeds identified thresholds, if any. Nursing administrators can use implicit rationing of nursing care as a crucial indicator of the impact of strategies and changes in the nurse practice environment (e.g., changes in staffing levels, skill mix, and other resources).
Key Words: Health Care Rationing, Health Facility Environment, Nursing Care
Health Care Rationing ; Health Facility Environment ; Nursing Care
3.Nurse empowerment in a tertiary university hospital during pandemic crisis
Ma. Stefanie P. Reyes ; Mildred B. Campo ; Mariel Rosette M. Delos Santos ; Andrew B. Sumpay ; Ma. Carmela M. Gatchalian ; Marivin Joy F. Lim ; Mickaela Louise D. Gamboa ; Louriane P. Ledesma ; Sarah Joy B. Maypa ; Queenie H. Quintana ; Ariel T. Laurenciana
Acta Medica Philippina 2024;58(16):117-126
Objectives:
Nurse empowerment is essential to ensure delivery of the best quality patient care and attaining positive nurse outcomes. Studies describe its relationship to retention, patient safety, commitment, productivity, job satisfaction, and positive outcomes. The study aimed to determine the level of empowerment of nurses in a tertiary university hospital during the pandemic crisis.
Methods:
The study was an exploratory descriptive cross-sectional design. Participants (N = 176, Nurses) were randomly selected through a sampling frame. The validated self-administered questionnaire, the Conditions of Work Effectiveness Questionnaire II, was used for data collection. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to determine whether there were statistically significant differences between the means of the participants’ empowerment scores when grouped according to their demographic profile.
Results:
The study found that the nurses in the tertiary university hospital have an overall moderate level of empowerment (TSE x̄ = 22.69, SD = 3.53; GE x̄ = 3.72, SD = 1.01). It was also found that there were statistically significant differences between the means of their total structural and global empowerment scores when grouped according to their age group, civil status, length of service, level of position, and area designation; while no statistically significant difference existed when grouped by their sex and level of education.
Conclusion
Since nurse empowerment leads to positive nurse and patient outcomes, improving levels of empowerment is thus essential. The results of this study will help administrators identify groups of nurses with relatively lower levels of empowerment and in turn develop programs that will help improve their levels of empowerment.
pandemic