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Predictors of patient‐centered care provision among nurses in acute care setting
Author(s) -
Alhalal Eman,
Alrashidi Laila Mohammad,
Alanazi Abdulrahman Nayir
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of nursing management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.925
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1365-2834
pISSN - 0966-0429
DOI - 10.1111/jonm.13100
Subject(s) - burnout , nursing , compassion , acute care , medicine , empowerment , patient satisfaction , health care , compassion fatigue , family medicine , psychology , clinical psychology , political science , law , economics , economic growth
Aim The study was conducted to assess the predictors of patient‐centred care provision among nurses working in an acute care setting. We hypothesized that higher structural empowerment and compassion satisfaction and lower burnout would predict the provision of patient‐centred care. Background Patient‐centred care is a crucial aspect of quality health care and the heart of nursing care. Although previous studies have highlighted some determinants of patient‐centred care provision among nurses, there remains a gap in understanding the factors that predict the provision of patient‐centred care. Methods A cross‐sectional predictive design was used. Through random sampling, 255 nurses were recruited from five hospitals providing acute care services in Saudi Arabia. Results Multiple linear regression revealed that compassion satisfaction ( β = 0.260 [95% CI: 0.201–0.645]), burnout ( β = −0.266 [95% CI: −0.998 to −0.403]) and structural empowerment ( β = 0.273 [95% CI: 0.462–1.427]) jointly explained significant variance (27.5%) in the provision of patient‐centred care by nurses. Conclusions The study findings reveal that lower burnout, higher compassion satisfaction and structural empowerment increase nurses' provision of patient‐centred care. Implications for Nursing Management Leadership and managerial strategies that not only address compassion satisfaction and burnout but also empower nurses are crucial for the provision of patient‐centred care by nurses.