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Supervisors are central to work characteristics affecting nurse outcomes

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Version 1 2014-10-28, 08:46
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 00:09 authored by J Rodwell, Andrew NobletAndrew Noblet, D Demir, P Steane
Purpose: To examine the predictive capability of the demand-control-support (DCS) model, augmented by organizational justice variables, on attitudinal- and health-related outcomes for nurses caring for elderly patients.

Design: The study is based on a cross-sectional survey design and involved 168 nurses working with elderly patients in facilities of a medium to large Australian organization.

Method: Participants were asked to complete a questionnaire consisting of scales designed for measuring independent (e.g., demand, control, support, organizational justice) and dependent (e.g., job satisfaction, organizational commitment, wellbeing and psychological distress) variables. Multiple regression analyses were undertaken to identify significant predictors of the outcome variables.

Findings: The DCS model explains the largest amount of variance across both the attitudinal and health outcomes with 27% of job satisfaction and 49% of organizational commitment, and 33% of psychological distress and 35% of wellbeing, respectively. Additional variance was explained by the justice variables for job satisfaction (5%), organizational commitment (4%), and psychological distress (23%).

Conclusions: Using organizational justice variables to augment the DCS model was valuable in better understanding the work conditions experienced by nurses caring for elderly patients. Inclusion of curvilinear effects added clarity to the potentially artifactual nature of certain interaction variables.

Clinical Relevance: The results indicated practical implications for managers of nurses caring for elderly patients in terms of developing and maintaining levels of job control, support, and fairness, as well as monitoring levels of job demands. The results particularly show the importance of nurses' immediate supervisors.

History

Journal

Journal of nursing scholarship

Volume

41

Pagination

310-319

Location

Indianapolis, Ind.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1547-5069

eISSN

1527-6546

Language

eng

Notes

Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that permission has been obtained for items included in Deakin Research Online. If you believe that your rights have been infringed by this repository, please contact drosupport@deakin.edu.au

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing

Issue

3

Publisher

Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing

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