Literature DB >> 17884430

Does safety climate moderate the influence of staffing adequacy and work conditions on nurse injuries?

Barbara A Mark1, Linda C Hughes, Michael Belyea, Yunkyung Chang, David Hofmann, Cheryl B Jones, Cynthia T Bacon.   

Abstract

PROBLEM: Hospital nurses have one of the highest work-related injury rates in the United States. Yet, approaches to improving employee safety have generally focused on attempts to modify individual behavior through enforced compliance with safety rules and mandatory participation in safety training. We examined a theoretical model that investigated the impact on nurse injuries (back injuries and needlesticks) of critical structural variables (staffing adequacy, work engagement, and work conditions) and further tested whether safety climate moderated these effects.
METHOD: A longitudinal, non-experimental, organizational study, conducted in 281 medical-surgical units in 143 general acute care hospitals in the United States.
RESULTS: Work engagement and work conditions were positively related to safety climate, but not directly to nurse back injuries or needlesticks. Safety climate moderated the relationship between work engagement and needlesticks, while safety climate moderated the effect of work conditions on both needlesticks and back injuries, although in unexpected ways. DISCUSSION AND IMPACT ON INDUSTRY: Our findings suggest that positive work engagement and work conditions contribute to enhanced safety climate and can reduce nurse injuries.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17884430      PMCID: PMC2062533          DOI: 10.1016/j.jsr.2007.04.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Safety Res        ISSN: 0022-4375


  50 in total

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  18 in total

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10.  Association between perceived inadequate staffing and musculoskeletal pain among hospital patient care workers.

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