Affiliation:
1. MSN, RN, Department of Nursing, Changhua Christian Hospital
2. PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, Chung-Shan Medical University; and Clinical Psychologist, Clinical Psychological Room, Chung Shan Medical University Hospital
3. PhD, RN, Associate Professor, Department of Nursing, Chung Shan Medical University; and Department of Nursing, Chung Shan Medical Hospital.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Background
Because nurses often work in medical environments characterized by high workloads and high levels of stress and pressure, they are particularly vulnerable to workplace burnout and their well-being may suffer. Related studies on burnout, resilience, and well-being have focused primarily on teachers, social workers, and students, with few studies addressing the situation faced by nursing staff. It is important to understand the factors affecting the well-being of nursing staff.
Purpose
This study explores the status quo and correlations among nursing-staff demographic characteristics, workplace burnout, well-being-related resilience, and the predictive factors of well-being in nurses.
Methods
A cross-sectional, descriptive, correlational research design and purposive sampling were used in this study. Nursing staff who had worked for more than 6 months at a medical center in central Taiwan were recruited as participants, with data from 289 participants collected. A structured questionnaire was used to collect data on demographic characteristics, workplace burnout, resilience, and well-being.
Results
The average scores for workplace burnout, resilience, and well-being were 40.40/(0- to 100-point scale), 26.79/(10- to 50-point scale), and 43.25/(24- to 96-point scale), respectively. The result of the regression analysis explained about 51.6% of the variance in well-being. Furthermore, resilience (28.4%), self-perceived health (14.3%), workplace burnout (4.5%), exercise frequency (1.8%), job title (1.2%), interpersonal pressure relief resilience (0.9%), and marital status (0.5%) were other important predictive factors of well-being in the participants.
Conclusions/Implications for Practice
Medical institutions should provide appropriate resilience-enhancing countermeasures to reduce workplace burnout as well as pay greater attention to the exercise frequency, self-perceived health, job title, and marital status of their nurses to help them achieve physical, mental, and overall well-being.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Reference32 articles.
1. Effects of internal service quality on nurses' job satisfaction, commitment and performance: Mediating role of employee well-being;Nursing Open,2021
2. Influencing factors on happiness of nurses in general hospitals;Medico-Legal Update,2020
3. Occupational fatigue and associated factors among Saudi nurses working 8-hour shifts at public hospitals;SAGE Open Nursing,2022
4. Compassion satisfaction and compassion fatigue in haematology cancer nurses: A cross-sectional survey;Nursing Open,2022
5. Social aspects of the work-related burnout problems in Taiwan;Taiwan Journal of Public Health,2007
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献