Incivility experiences of racially minoritised hospital staff, consequences for them and implications for patient care: An international scoping review

Author:

Joseph Olivia12ORCID,Mir Ghazala3ORCID,Fylan Beth24,Essler Pam2,Lawton Rebecca12

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine and Health School of Psychology University of Leeds Leeds UK

2. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Yorkshire and Humber Patient Safety Research Collaboration Bradford UK

3. Faculty of Medicine and Health Leeds Institute of Health Sciences University of Leeds Leeds UK

4. Faculty of Life Sciences School of Pharmacy and Medical Science University of Bradford Bradford UK

Abstract

AbstractWorkplace incivility is a pervasive complex problem within health care. Incivility manifests as subtle disrespectful behaviours, which seem inconsequential. However, evidence demonstrates that incivility can be harmful to targets and witnesses through negative emotions, poorer mental health, reduced job satisfaction, diminished performance and compromised patient care. It is unclear to what extent existing research critically explores how ethnicity, culture and racism influence how hospital staff experience incivility. This global scoping review systematically analysed existing research exploring the specific ways incivility manifests and impacts racially minoritised hospital workers. Of 2636 academic and 101 grey literature articles, 32 were included. Incivility experiences were categorised into four themes: (1) Cultural control, (2) Rejection of work contributions, (3) Disempowerment at work and (4) Managerial indifference. The included articles highlighted detrimental consequences, such as negative emotions, silencing, withdrawal and reduced support‐seeking behaviours. Few studies presented evidence regarding the negative impacts of incivility on patient care. Racialisation and racial dynamics are a significant factor for hospital‐based incivility. Currently we do not know the extent to which racialised incivility is associated directly or, perhaps either via burnout or disengagement, indirectly with poorer care. This knowledge can inform the creation of comprehensive, evidence‐based interventions to address this important issue.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference75 articles.

1. OnBlack Feminist Thought: thinking oppression and resistance through intersectional paradigm

2. Tit for Tat? The Spiraling Effect of Incivility in the Workplace

3. Appiah A.(1992).In my father’s house: Africa in the philosophy of culture.https://philpapers.org/rec/APPIMF‐2

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