6 results
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2. Can personal psychological resources reduce burnout and turnover in Australian hospital nurses?
- Author
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ELEY, SAM and HASSMEN, PETER
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PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *WELL-being , *WORK environment , *STATISTICS , *CROSS-sectional method , *SOCIAL media , *PSYCHOLOGY , *LABOR turnover , *SURVEYS , *SELF-efficacy , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *HOSPITAL nursing staff , *FACTOR analysis , *JOB satisfaction , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *CONCEPTUAL models , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *EMOTIONS , *INTENTION , *STATISTICAL sampling , *DATA analysis software , *DATA analysis , *DEPERSONALIZATION - Abstract
Objective: To examine whether personal psychological resources safeguard hospital nurses against adverse workplace consequences, particularly job burnout and the desire to leave the profession. Background: Nursing research has extensively documented the adverse effects of job burnout and staff turnover. With the current nursing shortage, it is imperative to identify resources and strategies that can mitigate adverse workplace outcomes. However, the role of personal psychological resources, or psychological capital, in aiding nurses to perform effectively in their work environment remains relatively unexplored. Study design and methods: This study adopted a cross-sectional survey design. The survey assessed nurses' experienced burnout (MBI-HSS), psychological capital (PCQ-24), and intentions to leave nursing. Hospital nurses (n= 258) from six states of Australia responded to an online anonymous survey between June and November 2022. Results: Respondents indicated a high degree of experienced burnout: 68.6% experienced high emotional exhaustion, 31.8% had high depersonalisation, and 31.8% had low personal accomplishment. Additionally, 38.8% had high intentions to leave the profession. Emotional exhaustion (p<.001, b=.56) and personal accomplishment (p=.006, b=-.15) were significant predictors of turnover intentions. Higher psychological capital was significantly associated with lower emotional exhaustion (p<.001, b=-.42), lower depersonalisation (p<.001, b=-.29), higher personal accomplishment (p<.001, b=.60), and lower turnover intentions (p<.001, b=.44). Discussion: Much of the nursing burnout and intent to leave literature focuses on negative rather than positive aspects of the work environment. Positive responses to workplace stimuli promote positive attitudes such as empowerment, job satisfaction, and organisational commitment that have a tangible impact on personal and occupational wellbeing. This may explain why nurses with stronger personal psychological resources experienced less burnout and voiced fewer intentions to leave the profession. Conclusion: The health and wellbeing of nurses should be a priority for healthcare organisations; the working conditions nurses face in Australian hospitals cause many to be negatively impacted by work stress. Implications for Research, Policy, and Practice: Nurses would benefit from initiatives to enhance their psychological resources. Targeted interventions to develop psychological capital should be examined in a nursing population. This can change policy, thereby benefitting the healthcare system. What is already known about the topic? • Australia is currently facing a shortage of qualified nurses. • Hospital nurses often experience job burnout and high levels of turnover due to the challenging nature of their work environment. • Personal psychological resources have been linked to positive workplace outcomes, such as job satisfaction and organisational commitment, in various settings. What this paper adds: • It demonstrates that nurses possessing greater personal psychological resources experience lower levels of burnout and are less likely to consider leaving the profession. • The paper suggests that implementing targeted interventions designed to enhance nurses' personal psychological resources could be a viable approach for mitigating burnout and turnover intentions (TI). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The mindset of birth predicts birth outcomes: Evidence from a prospective longitudinal study.
- Author
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Hoffmann, Lisa, Hilger, Norbert, and Banse, Rainer
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CHILDBIRTH & psychology , *THOUGHT & thinking , *WELL-being , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SATISFACTION , *PREGNANCY outcomes , *MOTHERHOOD , *EXPERIENCE , *CONCEPTUAL models , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
In this paper we explore whether mental representations about birth (birth‐related mindsets) assessed during pregnancy can predict labour and birth in the sense that the perception of birth as a natural (rather than a medical) event increases the probability of a low‐intervention birth. Birth, in turn, might affect short‐term and long‐term psychological well‐being. These assumptions were tested in a longitudinal study (N = 311), spanning the first half of pregnancy and up to 6 months after birth. The results of a single indicator model displayed a sequential process: women who held a more natural mindset prenatally were more likely to have low‐intervention births, which resulted in a more positive evaluation of the birth experience, which in turn predicted well‐being in the first weeks after birth (measured with ecological momentary assessment), and subsequently postpartum depression and post‐traumatic stress symptoms 8 weeks after birth as well as mother‐infant bonding 6 months after birth. The study demonstrates the relevance of psychological factors for childbirth. The construct of a birth‐related mindset could contribute to a better understanding of childbirth and help to make women's birth experiences safer and more satisfying and to improve the transition to motherhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Implementation of Computer-Aided Piano Music Automatic Notation Algorithm in Psychological Detoxification.
- Author
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Zhang, Xinmei
- Subjects
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MENTAL illness treatment , *WELL-being , *COMPUTER simulation , *COMPUTER software , *PSYCHOLOGY , *MUSIC therapy , *OCCUPATIONAL therapy , *CONCEPTUAL models , *SIGNAL processing , *DATA security , *MUSIC , *SOUND , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *ALGORITHMS , *INFORMATION technology - Abstract
This paper analyzes the modeling of a computer-aided piano music automatic notation algorithm, combines the influence of music on psychological detachment, and designs the piano music automatic notation algorithm in psychological detachment model construction. This paper investigates the multiresolution time-frequency representation constant Q-transform (CQT), which is common in music signal analysis, and finds that although CQT has higher frequency resolution at low frequencies, it also leads to lower temporal resolution. The variable Q-transform is introduced as a tool for multibasic frequency estimation of the time-frequency representation of music signals, which has better temporal resolution than CQT at the exact frequency resolution and efficient coefficient calculation. The short-time Fourier transform and constant Q-transform time-frequency analysis methods are implemented, respectively, and note onset detection and multibasic tone detection are implemented based on CNN models. The network structure, training method, and postprocessing method of CNN are optimized. This paper proposes a temporal structure model for maintaining music coherence to avoid manual input and ensure interdependence between tracks in music generation. This paper also investigates and implements a method for generating discrete music events based on multiple channels, including a multitrack correlation model and a discretization process. In this paper, the automatic piano music notation algorithm can play an influential role in significantly enhancing the actual effect of psychological detoxification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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5. My Autohistoria-Teoría (trans)formational experience: An autoethnographical case study of a transgender BIPOC teacher's experience with racial healing.
- Author
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Suárez, Mario I.
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WORK environment , *RACISM , *WELL-being , *AFFINITY groups , *SOCIAL support , *SOCIAL media , *CULTURAL pluralism , *PSYCHOLOGY , *EXPERIENCE , *ETHNOLOGY research , *TEACHERS , *MENTAL healing , *CONCEPTUAL models , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *AUTOBIOGRAPHY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Background: Visibility of the transgender community has increased, particularly in the media. Trans teachers face a challenge, as their professional roles are both public and private. In an effort to seek personal and professional support, trans teachers have turned to social media outlets. Additionally, current research does not always encompass intersectional experiences of trans BIPOC teachers. Aim: This paper presents an autohistoria-teoría, or autoethnographical case study account of the author's experience coming out in the workplace as a trans teacher in Texas. Methods: Guided by Slavin et al. multicultural model of the stress process coupled with intersectionality, this paper attempts to describe how a trans teacher of color navigates the workplace. The data for this study are a collection of all of the author's social media posts from 2005 to 2015. Results: Findings reveal that allies provided some support, and that this trans teacher used deflection as a coping strategy in posts. Conclusion: The results suggest that administrative and peer support can impact transgender workers' mental well-being. In this paper, autohistoria-teoría is used as a powerful way for a trans BIPOC teacher's narrative to be told, which contributed to cultural healing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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6. Understanding the outcomes of training to improve employee mental health: A novel framework for training transfer and effectiveness evaluation.
- Author
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Nielsen, Karina and Shepherd, Rose
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EMPLOYEE psychology , *EMPLOYEE education , *WORK environment , *WELL-being , *COMMUNICATION barriers , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGY , *COGNITION , *BEHAVIOR , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *TRANSFER of training , *CONCEPTUAL models , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
In this paper, we present the Integrated Training Transfer and Effectiveness Model (ITTEM), a dynamic model integrating dominant training transfer and training effectiveness models that can be used to evaluate whether mental health and wellbeing training interventions are transferred to the workplace and result in changes in emotions, cognitions and behaviours post-training. Through the integration of training transfer and training effectiveness literatures, the ITTEM aims to further our understanding of how we may enhance the effectiveness of training through optimising training transfer. We employ realist evaluation as our theoretical framework and argue that developing our understanding of what works for whom in which circumstances will enable us to improve how we design, implement, and evaluate training. We propose that pre- and post-training contextual factors influence the extent to which training mechanisms are triggered and bring about intended outcomes, in terms of emotions, cognitions, behaviours and improved employee mental health and wellbeing. The ITTEM can be used to develop our understanding of how and when training succeeds or fails. The ITTEM provides valuable insights in to how organisations may design future training to maximise the impact of transfer thus achieving the aims of protecting and promoting mental health and wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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