工作环境和员工参与在长期护理服务中老年人以人为本的过程中的作用

H. H. Midje, S. Torp, Kjell Ivar Øvergård
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:确保长期护理组织的高质量,以人为本的实践需要关注提供服务的员工的福祉-这是一个有时被忽视的因素,因为这些组织在国际上面临着越来越多的挑战。研究表明,工作需求和工作资源是工作环境的两个不同方面,它们相互作用,预测员工的幸福感和积极性。工作投入可以作为提高工作动机和绩效的一种手段,也可能促进以人为本的实践的活动。目的:探讨工作需求和工作资源对工作敬业度和以人为本过程的影响,并检验敬业度是否调节或中介需求和资源对以人为本过程的影响。方法:采用标准化自我报告问卷的横断面调查设计,收集挪威市政护理院和老年人疗养院128名注册护士和护理员的工作资源、工作需求、工作投入和以人为本流程的数据。研究发现:工作投入和以人为本的过程都与工作资源呈正相关。以人为本的过程与工作需求之间没有显著的负相关。工作投入在工作资源和以人为本的过程之间既不是重要的调节因素,也不是中介因素。结论:加强护理人员的工作资源可以积极影响他们的工作投入,并支持以人为本的过程。与主流的工作需求-资源(JD-R)模型的预测相反,工作投入并没有调节或调节工作资源对以人为中心的过程的影响。对实践的启示:提供工作资源,如有意义的任务、同事关系、发展和自主权,对提高护理人员的工作参与度很重要。改善组织和社会心理工作条件可以建立有利于以人为本流程的组织文化。在长期护理组织中建立支持性的工作环境,对资源高效地提供以人为本的护理具有战略意义
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The role of working environment and employee engagement in person-centred processes for older adults in long-term care services
Background: Assuring high-quality, person-centred practice in long-term care organisations requires attention to the wellbeing of the staff who deliver it – a factor sometimes overlooked amid the increasing challenges such organisations confront internationally. Research has shown that job demands and job resources are distinct aspects of the working environment that interact in predicting staff wellbeing and motivation. Work engagement can serve as a means to improve job motivation and performance, and also potentially facilitates activities that operationalise person-centred practice. Aims: To explore the influence of job demands and job resources on work engagement and person-centred processes, and examine whether engagement moderates or mediates the effects of demands and resources on person-centred processes. Method: A cross-sectional survey design with standardised self-report questionnaires was used to collect data on job resources, job demands, work engagement and person-centred processes from 128 registered nurses and nursing assistants in municipal care homes and nursing homes for older adults in Norway. Findings: Both work engagement and person-centred processes were positively associated with job resources. There was no significant negative association between person-centred processes and job demands. Work engagement was neither a significant moderator nor a mediator between job resources and person-centred processes. Conclusions: Enhancing job resources for nursing staff can positively impact their work engagement and support person-centred processes. In contrast to predictions by the dominant Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) model, work engagement did not moderate nor mediate the influence of job resources on person-centred processes. Implications for practice: Providing job resources such as meaningful tasks, colleague fellowship, development and autonomy is important to enhance nursing staff’s work engagement Improving organisational and psychosocial working conditions could build an organisational culture that is favourable for person-centred processes Building a supportive working environment within long-term care organisations is strategically important to resource-efficient delivery of person-centred care
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