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Are Your Vitals OK? Revitalizing Vitality of Nurses through Relational Caring for Patients

机译:你的生命力吗?通过关系关怀振兴护士的活力

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摘要

This study offers an alternative approach to address on-going concerns about burnout of healthcare employees. Departing from the existing job-demand based approach proposing that healthcare employees’ burnout can be resolved by reducing demands, we theorize that patient-centered prosocial behavior, even if it often increases job demands, could serve as potential job resources that fuel positive energy to vitalize nurses at work. We further theorize that this possibility could be more pronounced among a group of nurses with a strong sense of ethical membership regarding their hospital (i.e., moral identification). To test our hypotheses, we used a sample of 202 nurses from 104 South Korean hospitals. We found that, even controlling for workloads as an indicator of job demand, nurses who engage in patient-centered prosocial behavior (i.e., relational caring) are likely to feel vitalized, and this pattern is more salient among a group of nurses with high moral identification. Results indicate that prosocial behavior could be an alternative job resource that helps nurses flourish at work.
机译:本研究提供了一种替代的方法,可以解决关于医疗保健员工的倦怠的持续担忧。从现行的基于工作需求的方法提出,通过减少需求来解决医疗保健员工的倦怠,我们理解患者以患者为中心的个体的女性行为,即使它经常提高工作需求,也可以作为促进积极能量的潜在工作资源在工作中振兴护士。我们进一步了解这一可能性在一群护士中可能更加明显,具有强烈的道德成员与其医院(即道德识别)。为了测试我们的假设,我们使用了来自104家韩国医院的202名护士的样本。我们发现,即使控制工作负载作为工作需求的指标,也可能感到活泼的患者居住的女性行为(即关系)的护士,并且这种模式在一群高道德的护士中更加突出鉴别。结果表明,女性行为可能是一种替代工作资源,有助于护士在工作中蓬勃发展。

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