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The impact of shift-work and organizational climate on health outcomes in nurses

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-12, 04:21 authored by Kathryn Von TreuerKathryn Von Treuer, G Little, Matthew Fuller-TyszkiewiczMatthew Fuller-Tyszkiewicz
Shift workers have a higher rate of negative health outcomes than day shift workers. Few studies however, have examined the role of difference in workplace environment between shifts itself on such health measures. This study investigated variation in organizational climate across different types of shift work and health outcomes in nurses. Participants (n = 142) were nursing staff from a metropolitan Melbourne hospital. Demographic items elicited the type of shift worked, while the Work Environment Scale and the General Health Questionnaire measured organizational climate and health respectively. Analysis supported the hypotheses that different organizational climates occurred across different shifts, and that different organizational climate factors predicted poor health outcomes. Shift work alone was not found to predict health outcomes. Specifically, permanent night shift workers had significantly lower coworker cohesion scores compared with rotating day and evening shift workers and significantly higher managerial control scores compared with day shift workers. Further, coworker cohesion and involvement were found to be significant predictors of somatic problems. These findings suggest that differences in organizational climate between shifts accounts for the variation in health outcomes associated with shift work. Therefore, increased workplace cohesion and involvement, and decreased work pressure, may mitigate the negative health outcomes of shift workers.

History

Journal

Journal of occupational health psychology

Volume

19

Pagination

453-461

Location

Washington, D.C.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1076-8998

eISSN

1939-1307

Language

eng

Notes

Abstract originally published in Proceedings of the 8th Australian Conference on Quality of Life, 2006.

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, APA

Issue

4

Publisher

American Psychological Association

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