Predicting Levels of Policy Advocacy Engagement Among Acute-Care Health Professionals

Author:

Jansson Bruce S.1,Nyamathi Adeline2,Heidemann Gretchen3,Bird Melissa1,Ward Cathy Rogers4,Brown-Saltzman Katherine2,Duan Lei1,Kaplan Charles1

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Work, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

2. School of Nursing, University of California Los Angeles, CA, USA

3. Department of Social Work, Whittier College, CA, USA

4. Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Abstract

This study aims to describe the factors that predict health professionals’ engagement in policy advocacy. The researchers used a cross-sectional research design with a sample of 97 nurses, 94 social workers, and 104 medical residents from eight hospitals in Los Angeles. Bivariate correlations explored whether seven predictor scales were associated with health professionals’ policy advocacy engagement and revealed that five of the eight factors were significantly associated with it ( p < .05). The factors include patient advocacy engagement, eagerness, skills, tangible support, and organizational receptivity. Regression analysis examined whether the seven scales, when controlling for sociodemographic variables and hospital site, predicted levels of policy advocacy engagement. Results revealed that patient advocacy engagement ( p < .001), eagerness ( p < .001), skills ( p < .01), tangible support ( p < .01), perceived effectiveness ( p < .05), and organizational receptivity ( p < .05) all predicted health professional’s policy advocacy engagement. Ethical commitment did not predict policy advocacy engagement. The model explained 36% of the variance in policy advocacy engagement. Limitations of the study and its implications for future research, practice, and policy are discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine,Issues, ethics and legal aspects,Leadership and Management

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