1. The effects of organisational culture on nurses' perceptions of their work.
- Author
-
Garcia AB, Rocha FLR, Pissinati PSC, Marziale MHP, Camelo SHH, and Haddad MDCFL
- Subjects
- Adult, Brazil, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Perception, Attitude of Health Personnel, Burnout, Professional psychology, Job Satisfaction, Mental Health, Nurses psychology, Nursing Staff, Hospital organization & administration, Organizational Culture
- Abstract
This study aimed to analyse the relationship between the organisational culture and feelings of pleasure and suffering among working nursing professionals. This was a cross-sectional correlational study conducted in a tertiary hospital with 214 nursing staff over 3 months using three instruments: professional characterisation, the Brazilian Instrument for Assessment of Organisational Culture, and the Scale of Pleasure and Suffering at Work. The analysis included descriptive statistics and the Spearman correlation test. The external integration practice was the domain most frequently found in the organisational culture and the feeling of pleasure-gratification predominated among the workers. Values of cooperative professionalism and wellbeing, and practices of external integration and relationship promotion, were related to increased pleasure and decreased suffering at work. These aspects depend on the organisational culture of the institution. Investigating organisational culture facilitates the understanding of potential collective coping strategies and the organisational changes that favour good mental health in nurses.
- Published
- 2017
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