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P-1393 - Nurses and Hospital Work- an Organizational Stress Study
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2020
Abstract
This was a cross sectional study, which aimed to determine the interaction between situational, factors, role stressors, hazard exposure and personal factors among 246 nurses consisting most of females (78.5%) from the different wards and units in the Philippine General Hospital (PGH). The dominance of female sin the profession reinforce the prevailing notion that the caring professions such as nursing are relegated to women. This gives the study its gender perspective. Almost half (49.6%) of the respondents reported being ill due to work in the past year, and 56.1% missed work because of an illness. Correlation statistics using the Spearman's rho showed organizational role stressors was most significant in burnout among nurses in the Philippine's largest tertiary hospital.
Organizational role stressors consisted of ten dimensions, namely:
1) Inter-role Distance (IRD);
2) Role Stagnation (RS);
3) Role Expectation Conflict (REC);
4) Role Erosion (RE);
5) Role Overload (RO);
6) Role Isolation (RI);
7) Personal Inadequacy (PI);
8) Self-role Distance (SRD);
9) Role Ambiguity; and
10) Resource Inadequacy (RIn).
The contribution of the study is in advancing new concepts in the already existing framework of burnout, and thus, can assist nurses and hospital administration on how to control this problem.
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- Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2012
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