Literature DB >> 21302412

Quality of working life: perceptions of professional nurses at Phramongkutklao Hospital.

Wallapa Boonrod1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
OBJECTIVE: The 10th National Economic and Social Developmental Plan considered quality of human. Quality of human life was affected by quality of working life (QWL). Professional nurses had responsibility for patients' quality of life. Thus, professional nurses should have a quality of working life more effectively before they could help patients. Personal factors have relationships with the quality of working life. Thus, the present study was to describe the level of the QWL, to examine the relationships between job characteristics, organizational climate, organizational commitment, and job satisfaction with the QWL and to predict the QWL among professional nurses at Phramongkutklao Hospital. MATERIAL AND
METHOD: Two hundred and thirty-one professional nurses, who had worked for at least 3 years, were selected by stratified random sampling from 12 departments at Phramongkutklao Hospital. The questionnaires were developed, consisting of personal factors, job characteristics, organizational climate and commitment, job satisfaction and QWL. Content validity was examined by 9 experts. Reliability was obtained at 0.97 by means of Cronbach's alpha coefficient.
RESULTS: The over all mean score of the level of quality of working life among professional nurses was at a moderate level (mean = 3.412, SD = 0.459). Personal factors were age, status, education, position, experience, salary and wards were no relationships with the QWL. Job satisfaction was positive and related at a high level, while organizational commitment, organizational climate, and job characteristics were positive and related at a moderate level to the QWL significantly at 0.001 level (r = 0.724, 0.694, 0.640, and 0.334). Multiple regression analysis factors affecting QWL indicated that professional nurses associated negative factors with job characteristics and positive factors with job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and organizational climate at 62.10 percent (R2 = 0.621). QWL = 0.762 + 0.336 Job satisfaction + 0.265 Organizational climate + 0.250 Organizational commitment - 0.118 Job characteristics.
CONCLUSION: In order to develop the QWL among professional nurses at Phramongkutklao hospital, nursing administrators should promote their job satisfaction, organizational commitment, organizational climate, and job characteristics. Professional nurses who have better QWL, are more likely to stay in their positions and provide better nursing care.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 21302412

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Assoc Thai        ISSN: 0125-2208


  10 in total

Review 1.  Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Quality of Work Life in Iran (2011-2017).

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2.  ICU Nurse's Moral Distress as an Occupational Hazard Threatening Professional Quality of Life in the Time of Pandemic COVID 19.

Authors:  Maria Malliarou; Athanasios Nikolentzos; Dimitrios Papadopoulos; Theodora Bekiari; Pavlos Sarafis
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3.  Evaluation of the quality of working life and its effective factors in employed nurses of Tehran University of Medical Sciences Hospitals.

Authors:  Farahnaz Khajehnasiri; Abbas Rahimi Foroushani; Bita Forati Kashani; Negin Kassiri
Journal:  J Educ Health Promot       Date:  2021-03-31

4.  Validation of the Thai Version of a Work-related Quality of Life Scale in the Nursing Profession.

Authors:  Poramate Sirisawasd; Naesinee Chaiear; Nutjaree Pratheepawanit Johns; Jiraporn Khiewyoo
Journal:  Saf Health Work       Date:  2014-03-22

5.  Quality of work life and its association with workplace violence of the nurses in emergency departments.

Authors:  Jalil Eslamian; Ali Akbar Akbarpoor; Sayed Abbas Hoseini
Journal:  Iran J Nurs Midwifery Res       Date:  2015 Jan-Feb

6.  Quality of working life of nurses and its related factors.

Authors:  Tayebeh Moradi; Farzaneh Maghaminejad; Ismail Azizi-Fini
Journal:  Nurs Midwifery Stud       Date:  2014-06-15

7.  Investigation of the Relationship between Work Ability and Work-related Quality of Life in Nurses.

Authors:  Milad Abbasi; Abolfazl Zakerian; Arash Akbarzade; Nader Dinarvand; Maryam Ghaljahi; Mohsen Poursadeghiyan; Mohammad Hossein Ebrahimi
Journal:  Iran J Public Health       Date:  2017-10       Impact factor: 1.429

8.  Stressors, coping styles, and anxiety & depression in pediatric nurses with different lengths of service in six tertiary hospitals in Chengdu, China.

Authors:  Huiling Liao; Wei Tang; Yuanyuan Huang; Mei Liu; Ying Zhang; Lei Zhang; Tao Ai
Journal:  Transl Pediatr       Date:  2020-12

9.  Occupational Stress in the Indian Army Oncology Nursing Workforce: A Cross-sectional Study.

Authors:  Neelam Sharma; Puneet Takkar; Abhishek Purkayastha; Pradeep Jaiswal; Sachin Taneja; Nishant Lohia; Anu Rani Augustine
Journal:  Asia Pac J Oncol Nurs       Date:  2018 Apr-Jun

10.  Quality of nursing work life and turnover intention among nurses of tertiary care hospitals in Riyadh: a cross-sectional survey.

Authors:  Bayan Kaddourah; Amani K Abu-Shaheen; Mohamad Al-Tannir
Journal:  BMC Nurs       Date:  2018-10-01
  10 in total

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