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沙特阿拉伯的护士工作环境与情绪衰竭、工作满意度、离职意愿的关系
Author(s) -
Alharbi Amal A.,
Dahinten V. Susan,
MacPhee Maura
Publication year - 2020
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.14512
Subject(s) - nursing , job satisfaction , nursing shortage , emotional exhaustion , staffing , work (physics) , psychology , descriptive statistics , medicine , burnout , nurse education , social psychology , clinical psychology , statistics , mathematics , engineering , mechanical engineering
Aims To examine relationships between components of nurses’ work environments and emotional exhaustion, job satisfaction and intent to leave among nurses in Saudi Arabia. Design A descriptive correlational study with cross‐sectional data. Methods Data were collected in 2017 from 497 Registered Nurses working in a large tertiary hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Participants completed an online survey like that used in RN4Cast studies to measure nurses’ perceptions of their work environments and nurse outcomes. Hierarchical linear regression and logistic regression were conducted to examine the relationships between components of nurses’ work environments and nurse outcomes after controlling for nurse and patient characteristics. Results Nurse participation in hospital affairs was uniquely associated with all three nurse outcomes, whereas staffing and resource adequacy was associated with emotional exhaustion and job satisfaction, but not intent to leave. These two variables were also the components of the nursing practice environment that received the lowest ratings. Nurse manager ability, leadership and support of nurses, and nurse–physician relationships were associated with job satisfaction only. A nursing foundation for quality of care was not uniquely associated with any of the three outcomes. Finally, nurse emotional exhaustion and job satisfaction fully mediated the relationship between nurse participation in hospital affairs and intent to leave. Conclusion Magnet‐like work environments in Saudi Arabia are critical to recruiting and retaining nurses in a country with critical nursing shortages. Impact This study addresses a gap in the literature regarding which components of the nurses’ work environment are uniquely associated with emotional exhaustion, job satisfaction and intent to leave among nurses in Saudi Arabia. Study results will assist Saudi hospital administrators and nurse leaders to develop recruitment and retention strategies by focusing on those work environment components most associated with nurse outcomes: participation in hospital affairs and staffing and resource adequacy.

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