1.A Professional Nursing Practice Environment and Its Impact on Nurses' Task Motivation.
So Young KANG ; Young Rhan UM ; Sung Suk HAN
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2005;35(2):353-361
PURPOSE: This study was aimed at (a) describing professional nursing practice environments embedded in nursing care units and (b) examining its relationships to nurses' task motivation. METHOD: Using the Nursing Work Index Revised (NWI-R) and the Work Preference Inventory (WPI), a descriptive study was conducted with a sample of 320 registered nurses on 26 nursing care units in one University hospital in Korea. RESULT: Mean scores were 12.9 on a 5-20 score range of an autonomous environment scale, 7.3 on a 3-12 score range of a collaborative environment, and 15.8 on a 7-28 score range of control over nursing practice. Nurses' age, educational level, job position, working period at the hospital and employment status were significantly related to the degree of a professional practice environment. The extent to which a professional practice environment accounted for task motivation was 19.5%. CONCLUSION: There is a certain degree of professionalism in the workplace environment that nurses perceived within the nursing care units. When nurses care for patients, the degree of task motivation depends on the work environment supporting the professional nursing practice.
*Organizational Culture
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Nursing Staff, Hospital/*psychology
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Nursing Service, Hospital/*organization & administration
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*Motivation
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Male
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Korea
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*Job Satisfaction
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Humans
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Female
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Adult
2.Development of a Measurement of Intellectual Capital for Hospital Nursing Organizations.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2011;41(1):129-140
PURPOSE: This study was done to develop an instrument for measuring intellectual capital and assess its validity and reliability in identifying the components, human capital, structure capital and customer capital of intellectual capital in hospital nursing organizations. METHODS: The participants were 950 regular clinical nurses who had worked for over 13 months in 7 medical hospitals including 4 national university hospitals and 3 private university hospitals. The data were collected through a questionnaire survey done from July 2 to August 25, 2009. Data from 906 nurses were used for the final analysis. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Cronbach's alpha coefficients, item analysis, factor analysis (principal component analysis, Varimax rotation) with the SPSS PC+ 17.0 for Windows program. RESULTS: Developing the instrument for measuring intellectual capital in hospital nursing organizations involved a literature review, development of preliminary items, and verification of validity and reliability. The final instrument was in a self-report form on a 5-point Likert scale. There were 29 items on human capital (5 domains), 21 items on customer capital (4 domains), 26 items on structure capital (4 domains). CONCLUSION: The results of this study may be useful to assess the levels of intellectual capital of hospital nursing organizations.
Adult
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Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration
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Health Manpower/organization & administration
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Hospitals, University
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Humans
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Knowledge Management
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*Nursing Service, Hospital/organization & administration
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Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology
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Principal Component Analysis
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Questionnaires
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Young Adult