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Managing during the COVID‐19 pandemic: A cross‐sectional study of health care workers' perceived organizational support and its consequences on their compassion, resilience and turnover intention.

Authors :
Ahmed, Fatma Refaat
Bani‐Issa, Wegdan
Timmins, Fionna
Dias, Jacqueline Maria
Al‐Yateem, Nabeel
Subu, Muhammad Arsyad
Alzahmi, Shaikhah Mohamed
Saqan, Roba
Abdul Rahman, Hanif
AbuRuz, Mohannad Eid
Source :
Journal of Nursing Management. Oct2022, Vol. 30 Issue 7, p2642-2652. 11p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Aim: The aim of this study is to evaluate health care professionals' perceived organizational support and its effect on their compassion, resilience and turnover intention in the United Arab Emirates. Background: The COVID‐19 pandemic exerted unprecedented pressure on health care systems, professionals and management systems. Health care organizations begin to explore their roles and function in relation to risks and resilience, in addition to ascertain what level of organization support they are providing to their workers. Methods: A cross‐sectional study was conducted with a questionnaire administered to 538 health care workers, to examine their personal resources and organizational support during the pandemic. Results: A total of 37.7% of nurses were found to have a moderate level of resilience, logistic regression showed that being married is a protective factor against resigning from the profession (OR = 0.462, P =.012, 95% CI: 0.254–0.842), and health care workers who perceived higher organizational support were approximately 50% less likely to have a turnover intention (OR = 0.506, P =.009, 95% CI: 0.303–0.845). Multiple linear regression model indicated significantly higher resilience among physicians (β = 0.12, P <.05) and allied health care practitioners (β = 0.12, P =.022). Organizational support had a significant positive relationship with resilience scores (β = 0.20, P <.001); adequate training was significantly related to higher compassion levels (β = 0.11, P <.05) and high organizational support scores were associated with increased compassion scores (β = 0.27, P <.001). Conclusions: Front‐line health care workers reported moderate organizational support during the pandemic, commensurately reflected in moderate levels of personal resilience and self‐compassion. Continued and better support is vital for employee sustainability and the increased health system performance, including quality of care and patient outcomes. Implications for nursing management: Nurse managers should help health care workers improve self‐care strategies by strengthening personal resources, including shortened duty hours, offering adequate break time, providing a safe work climate and purveying adequate personal protective equipment and supplies to combat infections. They should build an empathetic work environment through understanding the needs of staff, helping tackle their work stress and sustaining cultures of compassion through promoting rewarding and flexibility strategies. Moreover, policymakers and nurse mangers should create a rewarding culture for nurses and other health care workers to increase their commitment to their jobs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09660429
Volume :
30
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Nursing Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160572072
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jonm.13824