1. Development of an early warning resilience survey for healthcare organizations
- Author
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Kristopher H. Morgan, Nicholas E. Libby, Amy K. Weaver, and Cindy Cai
- Subjects
Psychology ,Health profession ,Resilience ,Burnout ,Engagement ,Survey design ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Objective: To design and validate a brief set of measures identifying staff and work areas exhibiting low levels of resilience within healthcare organizations. Data sources/Study design: Primary data were gathered via survey administration between April and August of 2016 from 33,622 respondents across 123 facilities. These surveys included pilot items designed to measure resilience and were administered to all employees alongside employee engagement surveys. Data collection/Extraction methods: Following the data collection period for the pilot survey, data from all organizations were integrated into a single analytical dataset. Factor analyses were used to determine the underlying constructs of healthcare worker resilience. Cronbach's alpha and correlation analyses tested the internal consistency and validity of the instrument. Principal findings: A brief set consisting of eight items was identified as a psychometrically validated measure of resilience. This measure consists of two subscales, Activation and Decompression. These measures exist independent of employee engagement, indicating an empirical distinction between the two concepts. Resilience was found to predict 38% of variance in engagement scores. Conclusions: An eight-item instrument can accurately measure resilience to identify burnout risk and serve as a predictor of other workforce outcomes such as engagement.
- Published
- 2019
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