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“护士对医院可视化管理的使用——关于在系统性能和工作条件方面所造成影响的纵向性定量研究”
Author(s) -
Williamsson Anna,
Dellve Lotta,
Karltun Anette
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/jan.13855
Subject(s) - longitudinal study , psychology , nursing , medicine , pathology
Aim The aim of this study was to examine potential benefits provided by daily visual management tool use and explore its association with systems performance and working conditions among hospital nurses. Background Visual management tools used in everyday work and improvement work in health care theoretically contribute to shared understanding of complex work systems and provide certain user benefits. Cognitive load, miscommunication within and between professional groups, and pressure to engage in care process redesign add to nurses’ strained working conditions. Design Quantitative longitudinal. Methods Questionnaires were distributed at T0, ( N  = 948, 66% response rate), T1 ( N  = 900, 70% response rate), and T2 ( N  = 621, 72% response rate) to nurses at five hospitals. Three groups of users (daily users, start users, and non‐daily users) were compared by means T1–T2 (significance tested with Wilcoxon signed rank test) and by mixed model repeated measures T0, T1, T2. Results Daily use associated to better overview of work, collaboration, social capital, and clinical engagement. Job resources were rated higher by daily users. Mental stress increased and development opportunities decreased over time among non‐daily users. There were associations between use and perceptions of systems performance, though the differences between groups were small. Conclusion This study specifically explores visual management tool use in the hospital setting, which contributes to research by broadening the understanding of cognitive, social, and emotional benefits provided by visual management tool use. Daily use was associated to positive working conditions, small but positive differences in systems performance, and indicated a buffering effect on nurses’ mental stress.

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