| Literature DB >> 34318719 |
Mazen El Ghaziri1, Susan Johnson2, Christina Purpora3, Shellie Simons1, Rosemary Taylor4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Incivility among workers in the health sector is recognized as an occupational hazard. The COVID-19 outbreak brought sudden and profound changes to many health care settings, many of which have been identified as antecedents to workplace incivility. The purpose of this retrospective study was to explore the experiences of registered nurses with workplace incivility, cyber-incivility, and incivility outside of work during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; cyber-incivility; incivility; occupational stressors; registered nurses
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34318719 PMCID: PMC8322958 DOI: 10.1177/21650799211024867
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Workplace Health Saf ISSN: 2165-0799 Impact factor: 1.413
Demographic and Work-Related Characteristics of Registered Nurse Respondents, N = 526
| Characteristic ( | Frequency (%) or |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Female | 402 (93) |
| Male | 21 (4.8) |
| Gender queer | 1 (0.2) |
| Chose not to answer | 9 (2.0) |
| Age | 45.8 ± 13.5 years |
| Racial identity | |
| White | 315 (87.3) |
| African American | 12 (3.3) |
| Asian | 10 (2.8) |
| Hispanic | 13 (3.6) |
| Mixed race or ethnicity | 11 (3.0) |
| Education level | |
| Diploma and associate degree | 101 (23.4) |
| Bachelor’s degree | 244 (56.5) |
| Graduate degree (Master’s degree or higher) | 87 (20.1) |
| State | |
| California | 50 (11.7) |
| Massachusetts | 203 (47.3) |
| Washington | 138 (32.2) |
| Other states | 28 (8.8) |
| Occupational setting | |
| Inpatient hospital | 333 (78) |
| Outpatient clinic or primary care | 28 (6.5) |
| Public/community health | 26 (6.1) |
| Outpatient surgery | 15 (3.5) |
| Long-term care | 12 (2.8) |
| Currently not working | 8 (1.5) |
| COVID-19 related | 4 (0.9) |
| Mix of inpatient and outpatient | 3 (0.7) |
| Position | |
| Staff nurse | 383 (89.3) |
| Manager/administrator/director | 26 (6.0) |
| Nurse educator | 9 (2.1) |
| Different role | 11 (2.6) |
| Years worked | 18.7 ± 14.6 years |
| Workload during COVID-19 pandemic | |
| More than usual—Before COVID-19 pandemic | 294 (67.4) |
| Same as usual—Before COVID-19 pandemic | 90 (21.0) |
| Less than usual—Before COVID-19 pandemic | 45 (10) |
| Furloughed or laid off | 3 (0.7) |
| Not working due to health concerns | 4 (0.9) |
| Hours worked per week | |
| 1–24 hours | 45 (10.0) |
| 25–40 hours | 271 (62.0) |
| More than 40 hours | 112 (26.0) |
| I haven’t been working during the COVID-19 pandemic | 7 (2.0) |
| Setting | |
| Reassigned to another unit | 180 (41.3) |
| Same | 235 (53.9) |
| Working from home | 12 (2.8) |
| Not applicable (I am not working during COVID-19 pandemic) | 9 (2.0) |
Note. Numbers (n) on some variables may not sum to total due to missing data.
Registered Nurses’ Self-Reported Exposure to, and Perpetrators of, Incivility and Cyber-Incivility, N = 526
| Variable ( | |
|---|---|
| Mean incivility score (co-workers) | 6.68 ± 4.37 |
| Mean incivility score (supervisors) | 5.33 ± 4.73 |
| Experiences of incivility at work | |
| First time during pandemic | 15 (3.0) |
| Same as before | 169 (34.2) |
| More than before | 185 (37.4) |
| Less than before | 73 (14.9) |
| Not applicable—Have never experienced workplace incivility | 52 (10.5) |
| Perpetrators of incivility | |
| Registered nurses | 220 (41.8) |
| Supervisor/middle-level manager | 213 (40.5) |
| Patients | 180 (34.2) |
| Family and friends of patients | 168 (31.9) |
| Physicians | 161 (30.6) |
| Hospital administrator | 109 (20.7) |
| Unlicensed nursing staff (CNA, UAP, other) | 77 (14.6) |
| Non-nursing co-workers | 67 (12.7) |
| Licensed practical nurses/vocational nurses | 9 (1.7) |
| Others not listed | 25 (4.8) |
| Witnessed incivility at work | |
| First time during pandemic | 7 (1.4) |
| Same as before | 170 (34.4) |
| More than before | 226 (45.8) |
| Less than before | 56 (11.3) |
| Not applicable—Have never witnessed workplace incivility | 35 (7.1) |
| Participant acted in uncivil manner | |
| First time during pandemic | 35 (7.1) |
| Same as before | 86 (17.4) |
| More than before | 50 (10.1) |
| Less than before | 56 (11.3) |
| Not applicable—Have never acted in uncivil manner | 267 (54.1) |
| Experienced cyber-incivility | |
| Never | 270 (56.8) |
| Rarely | 82 (17.3) |
| Sometimes | 87 (18.3) |
| Frequently | 26 (5.5) |
| Many times | 10 (2.1) |
| Experiences of cyber-incivility | |
| First time during pandemic | 26 (5.5) |
| Same as before | 61 (12.8) |
| More than before | 125 (26.3) |
| Less than before | 20 (4.2) |
| Not applicable—Have never experienced cyber-incivility | 243 (51.2) |
| Perpetrators of cyber-incivility | |
| Registered nurses | 121 (23.0) |
| Supervisor/middle-level manager | 69 (13.1) |
| Family and friends of patients | 44 (8.4) |
| Non-nursing co-workers | 41 (7.8) |
| Hospital administrator | 33 (6.3) |
| Physicians | 32 (6.1) |
| Patients | 22 (4.2) |
| Unlicensed nursing staff (CNA, UAP, other) | 18 (3.4) |
| Licensed practical nurses/vocational nurses | 6 (1.1) |
| Others not listed | 28 (5.3) |
| Experienced incivility during the COVID-19 pandemic related to the role as health care professional on the way to and from work | |
| Yes | 97 (21.8) |
| No | 348 (78.2) |
Note. Numbers (n) on some variables may not sum to total due to missing data. CNA = certified nursing assistant; UAP = unlicensed assistive personnel.
Figure 1.Quantitative themes.
Note. The circles represent the societal stressors that respondents mentioned. The first row of rectangular shapes represents the two overarching themes. The second row represents the main themes within the overarching theme of “on edge.”