参与新冠肺炎相关工作如何改变护士的工作需求、工作资源及其与职业倦怠的关系:来自中国的证据<sup><a class="tippyShow" data ><a class="tippy -arrow " ="true" data & tippy-content="本文报告的结果来自第一作者,Iscte-IUL (Instituto Universitário de Lisboa)和SMU(南方医科大学)的硕士学位论文。这篇论文的早期版本被接受在…

Xiaohui Wang, Shaozhuang Ma, Wenyu Liao
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近3年来,中国实施“零疫情”政策,医护人员不断投身抗疫工作。然而,人们对参与新冠肺炎相关工作如何影响中国护士的职业倦怠知之甚少。本研究通过考虑中国护士参与新冠肺炎相关工作的频率高低,探讨护士的工作需求和工作资源与职业倦怠之间的关系。本研究采用交叉实验设计。在工作需求-资源(Job demand - resources, JDR)模型的指导下,我们以广东省4所公立医院的336名护士为样本,进行假设和回归分析。总体抽样结果显示:1)参与covid -19相关工作的频率与更高的工作量水平相关;2)护士职业倦怠与工作量、情绪需求、工作家庭冲突呈正相关,与主管关系、薪酬、工作独立性呈负相关;3)情绪智力对工作负荷与职业倦怠之间的正向关系有缓解作用。对比分析显示,由于参与COVID-19工作的频率不同,存在显著差异。在高频率组(N = 108), 1)情绪需求与较高的倦怠水平相关,情绪智力适度地强化了两者之间的正相关关系;2)薪酬与较低的职业倦怠水平相关;3)护士报告了更高的工作量和与主管的关系。在低频率组(N = 147),工作独立性与较低的倦怠水平相关;我们发现一些证据表明,由于护士参与covid -19相关工作的频率不同,他们的工作需求和工作资源及其与倦怠的关联有所不同。讨论了政策制定的意义和理论贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How Involvement in COVID-19-Related Work Changed Nurses' Job Demands, Job Resources, and Their Associations with Burnout: Evidence from China <sup><a class="tippyShow" data-tippy-arrow="true" data-tippy-content="The results reported in this paper come from the dissertation of the first author, a master graduated from Iscte-IUL (Instituto Universitário de Lisboa) and SMU (Southern Medical University, China) program. An earlier version of this paper was accepted for presentation at the …
China adopted a “Zero-COVID” policy for nearly three years, making Chinese healthcare workers constantly involved in COVID-19-related work. However, little is known about how involvement in COVID-19-related work shaped Chinese nurses’ burnout. This study explores how nurses’ job demands and job resources are associated with their burnout by considering high and low frequent involvements in COVID-19-related work in China. This study employed a cross-sessional design. Guided by Job Demands-Resources (JDR) model, we developed hypotheses and tested them using regression analysis with a sample of 336 nurses working in four public hospitals in Guangdong, China. Overall sample results revealed: 1) frequency of involvement in COVID-19-related work was related to a higher level of workload; 2) nurses’ burnout was positively associated with workload, emotional demands, and work-family conflict, and negatively associated with a relationship with supervisor, remuneration, and independence of work; 3) emotional intelligence mitigated the positive relationship between workload and burnout. Comparison analysis showed significant differences due to the frequency of involvement in COVID-19 work. In the high-frequency group (N = 108), 1) emotional demands were related to a higher level of burnout, and emotional intelligence moderately accentuates the positive relationship between the two variables; 2) remuneration was related to a lower level of burnout; 3) nurses reported higher levels of workload and relationship with the supervisor. In the low-frequency group (N = 147), independence of work was related to a lower level of burnout; We found some evidence that nurses’ job demands and job resources and their associations with burnout differed due to their frequency of involvement in COVID-19-related work. Implications for policy-making and theoretical contribution are discussed.
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