Literature DB >> 19517874

Well-being at work among ageing hospital nurses in Northern Finland: a grounded theory study.

Kati Utriainen1, Helvi Kyngäs, Juhani Nikkilä.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to create a substantive theory of the well-being at work among ageing hospital nurses in Northern Finland. STUDY
DESIGN: A grounded theory study. Well-being at work was studied from a positive viewpoint to determine what evoked well-being on the job. The aim was to discover core processes of the phenomenon based on nurses' authentic experiences.
METHODS: The subjects of this study (n = 21) were nurses working at a university hospital in Northern Finland, aged 45-55 years with at least 10 years of hospital work experience, doing 3-shift work. The material consisted of first-phase open interviews (n = 4) and diary entries (n = 4), and of second-phase interviews (n = 4) and open-data collection forms (n = 9) based on these, according to theoretical sampling. The material was studied using a constant comparison analysis.
RESULTS: The core process of the well-being at work of ageing hospital nurses was found to be reciprocity in relation to colleagues (nurse-nurse interaction) and patients (nurse-patient interaction).
CONCLUSIONS: Communal aspects were the characteristic features of well-being at work, which were grounded in the surrounding community. Well-being at work was linked to its target, and patient care was found to be the basis of nurses' well-being at work.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19517874     DOI: 10.3402/ijch.v68i2.18325

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Circumpolar Health        ISSN: 1239-9736            Impact factor:   1.228


  1 in total

1.  Nursing assistants' dilemma: caregiver versus caretaker.

Authors:  Michelle D Holmberg; Marian Flum; Cheryl West; Yuan Zhang; Shpend Qamili; Laura Punnett
Journal:  Hosp Top       Date:  2013 Jan-Mar
  1 in total

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