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The Relationship Between Nurses' Psychological Well-Being and Their Work Productivity Loss: A Descriptive Correlational Study.
- Source :
- SAGE Open Nursing; 10/3/2024, p1-14, 14p
- Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Introduction: Nurses play a vital role in ensuring effective patient care delivery and organizational productivity. Hence, it becomes imperative to prioritize their psychological well-being and explore how its impairment may be associated with their productivity loss. Aims: The study aims to investigate the relationship between nurses' psychological well-being and their work productivity loss by examining how nurses self-reported their own psychological well-being and work productivity loss. Methods: A descriptive correlational design was conducted at an Egyptian university hospital. A convenience sample of 400 nurses completed two tools: (a) Outcome Questionnaire-45 was used to assess the psychological well-being of nurses and (b) the Work Productivity and Activity Impairment – General Health Questionnaire was used to measure nurses' work productivity. Results: Among the 400 surveyed nurses, 66.7% reported overall poor psychological well-being. Regarding work productivity loss, 22.8% of nurses missed an average of 974.81 work hours due to absenteeism, and 62.0% lost an average of 10,630 work hours due to presenteeism. Additionally, 75.5% experienced impaired daily living activities. Approximately 13.4% of total working hours were missed due to health problems or psychological distress. Regression analysis revealed that poor psychological well-being significantly predicts work productivity loss, accounting for 2.0% of absenteeism, 11.0% of presenteeism, 17.0% of daily activity impairment, and 9.0% of overall productivity loss, with the model being significant (p < 0.01). Conclusion: Nurses often experience poor psychological well-being and distress that hinder their daily activities and cause work productivity loss. Therefore, hospital management should prioritize improving nurses' physical and mental health and bolstering their self-efficacy and resilience to minimize the effects of symptom distress on productivity. Investing in nurses' well-being through managerial caring, organizational support, and fostering a supportive work environment are vital strategies for promoting quality patient care and enhancing their work productivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- WORK
SELF-evaluation
STATISTICAL correlation
LABOR productivity
ACADEMIC medical centers
PSYCHOLOGICAL distress
JOB absenteeism
MENTAL health
MEDICAL quality control
CRONBACH'S alpha
STATISTICAL sampling
PRESENTEEISM (Labor)
WORK environment
RESEARCH evaluation
QUESTIONNAIRES
DESCRIPTIVE statistics
RESEARCH methodology
RESEARCH
CONCEPTUAL structures
CONFIDENCE intervals
DATA analysis software
PSYCHOLOGY of nurses
WELL-being
EXPERIENTIAL learning
ACTIVITIES of daily living
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 23779608
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- SAGE Open Nursing
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 180103750
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1177/23779608241285400