Service Climate and Nurses’ Collaboration with Families of Older Patients in the Care Process during Hospitalization

Author:

Vinarski-Peretz Hedva12ORCID,Mashiach-Eizenberg Michal2,Idilbi Nasra34,Halperin Dafna25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. M.A. Program in Public Administration and Public Policy, Department of Political Science, Yezreel Valley Academic College, Yezreel Valley 1930600, Israel

2. Department of Health Systems Management, Yezreel Valley Academic College, Yezreel Valley 1930600, Israel

3. Department of Nursing, Yezreel Valley Academic College, Yezreel Valley 1930600, Israel

4. Nursing Research Unit, Galilee Medical Center, Nahariya 22100, Israel

5. Department of Community Gerontology, Yezreel Valley Academic College, Yezreel Valley 1930600, Israel

Abstract

This study focuses on the concrete role of the presence of a ward’s service climate in cultivating nurses’ collaboration with family members. Accordingly, this study examined the moderating role of the service climate in the link between nurses’ attitudes toward the family and their collaboration with family members in the care process. This is the second article of a series of studies we conducted among health staff in Israeli public hospitals. Relying on the patient- and family-centered care approach and using a cross-sectional study of 179 nurses from 13 internal medicine, surgical and geriatric wards at a large public hospital in Israel, we conducted a multiple regression analysis to test the contribution of all relationship variables to predicting nurses’ collaborative behavior with the family in the care process during elderly hospitalization. The findings indicate that service climate had a conditional moderating effect on the relationship between nurses’ perception of the family as a burden and their collaboration with the family in nursing care. Namely, in the absence of a targeted service climate, nurses form perceptions about the families as a burden, which in turn affects their distinct non-collaboration, and vice versa.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

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