M. Mrayyan, Nijmeh Al-Atiyyat, Sami Al-Rawashdeh, Abdullah Algunmeeyn, H. Abunab
{"title":"Nurses' authentic leadership and their perceptions of safety climate: differences across areas of work and hospitals.","authors":"M. Mrayyan, Nijmeh Al-Atiyyat, Sami Al-Rawashdeh, Abdullah Algunmeeyn, H. Abunab","doi":"10.1108/LHS-05-2021-0040","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"PURPOSE\nThis study aims to compare nurses' authentic leadership and perceptions of the safety climate and concepts association according to different areas of work and types of hospitals.\n\n\nDESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH\nA cross-sectional design was used to conduct this comparative study on 314 Jordanian nurses. The Authentic Leadership Questionnaire (ALQ) and the Safety Climate Survey (SCS) were used.\n\n\nFINDINGS\nNurses in private hospitals were more educated. True leadership was mild. Unit nurses had higher ALQ and subscale mean scores. Armed forces hospitals had the highest ALQ subscales, while governmental hospitals had the lowest. The ALQ mean scores favored military hospitals. Governmental hospitals have a negative safety climate. Unit nurses had a higher SCS mean than ward nurses. Military, governmental and private hospitals are rated the safest. Nurses benefited from higher SCS scores in military hospitals. Nurses' ALQ and safety climate perceptions were moderately positive.\n\n\nRESEARCH LIMITATIONS/IMPLICATIONS\nA larger, randomized and equal-sized sample is recommended in future studies to conclude different areas of work and hospitals. It is also recommended to report the confidence interval in further studies using different statistical methods, increasing confidence when interpreting statistical significance variables. Other mediating, moderating and predicting variables could be studied and compared across different areas of work and types of hospitals. Sample characteristics should be handled as confounding variables in the next planned study using various ways to control confounding variables such as randomization, restriction, matching, regression and statistical control. The authors plan to statistically control for the confounding variables by entering them into the regression model. Future studies could investigate safety culture; both safety culture and safety climate are formative and inclusive terms (Experts Insight, 2017).\n\n\nPRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS\nThis paper fills in the gap in the literature and practice. Authentic leadership is associated with safety climate perceptions and varies across different areas of work and hospitals. Interventions are required to improve safety climate perceptions and promote authentic leadership in all settings and hospitals. Military hospitals ranked the highest in nurses' perceptions of authentic leadership and safety climate.\n\n\nSOCIAL IMPLICATIONS\nThe current study's favorable association between authentic leadership and safety climate measurement would apply to many high-risk institutions, including public and private hospitals. It becomes necessary to include the impacts of authentic leadership on the safe climate within the nursing curriculum and continuing education courses. This may be put into action by executing a hands-on activity, followed by information and reflection conversations that highlight the link between authentic leadership and safety climate measurement. According to the findings of this study, authentic leadership appears to be a basic block in making a difference in nurses' views of safety climate.\n\n\nORIGINALITY/VALUE\nAuthentic leadership style is a relatively new concept in the health-care sector, and its link to safety climate security still needs empirical evidence. It is still unclear how leadership resulted in more effective outcomes (Maziero et al., 2020). Few studies investigated both the concepts of authentic leadership and the nursing safety climate (Dirik and Intepeler, 2017; Lee et al., 2019a; Woo and Han, 2018). Aside from the scarcity of studies, no study has compared \"working area,\" \"department\" or \"hospital type\" concepts. Few comparative studies have been conducted using concepts of interest. For example, authentic leadership was linked to empowerment and burnout (Laschinger et al., 2013) and nurses' satisfaction with safety climates (Vatani et al., 2021). No research has examined authentic leadership in Jordan's nursing and health-care context. Few studies focused on the safety climate other than authentic leadership (Abualrub et al., 2012) or the safety culture in Jordan rather than the safety climate (Khater et al., 2015).","PeriodicalId":46165,"journal":{"name":"Leadership in Health Services","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Leadership in Health Services","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/LHS-05-2021-0040","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
PURPOSE
This study aims to compare nurses' authentic leadership and perceptions of the safety climate and concepts association according to different areas of work and types of hospitals.
DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH
A cross-sectional design was used to conduct this comparative study on 314 Jordanian nurses. The Authentic Leadership Questionnaire (ALQ) and the Safety Climate Survey (SCS) were used.
FINDINGS
Nurses in private hospitals were more educated. True leadership was mild. Unit nurses had higher ALQ and subscale mean scores. Armed forces hospitals had the highest ALQ subscales, while governmental hospitals had the lowest. The ALQ mean scores favored military hospitals. Governmental hospitals have a negative safety climate. Unit nurses had a higher SCS mean than ward nurses. Military, governmental and private hospitals are rated the safest. Nurses benefited from higher SCS scores in military hospitals. Nurses' ALQ and safety climate perceptions were moderately positive.
RESEARCH LIMITATIONS/IMPLICATIONS
A larger, randomized and equal-sized sample is recommended in future studies to conclude different areas of work and hospitals. It is also recommended to report the confidence interval in further studies using different statistical methods, increasing confidence when interpreting statistical significance variables. Other mediating, moderating and predicting variables could be studied and compared across different areas of work and types of hospitals. Sample characteristics should be handled as confounding variables in the next planned study using various ways to control confounding variables such as randomization, restriction, matching, regression and statistical control. The authors plan to statistically control for the confounding variables by entering them into the regression model. Future studies could investigate safety culture; both safety culture and safety climate are formative and inclusive terms (Experts Insight, 2017).
PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS
This paper fills in the gap in the literature and practice. Authentic leadership is associated with safety climate perceptions and varies across different areas of work and hospitals. Interventions are required to improve safety climate perceptions and promote authentic leadership in all settings and hospitals. Military hospitals ranked the highest in nurses' perceptions of authentic leadership and safety climate.
SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS
The current study's favorable association between authentic leadership and safety climate measurement would apply to many high-risk institutions, including public and private hospitals. It becomes necessary to include the impacts of authentic leadership on the safe climate within the nursing curriculum and continuing education courses. This may be put into action by executing a hands-on activity, followed by information and reflection conversations that highlight the link between authentic leadership and safety climate measurement. According to the findings of this study, authentic leadership appears to be a basic block in making a difference in nurses' views of safety climate.
ORIGINALITY/VALUE
Authentic leadership style is a relatively new concept in the health-care sector, and its link to safety climate security still needs empirical evidence. It is still unclear how leadership resulted in more effective outcomes (Maziero et al., 2020). Few studies investigated both the concepts of authentic leadership and the nursing safety climate (Dirik and Intepeler, 2017; Lee et al., 2019a; Woo and Han, 2018). Aside from the scarcity of studies, no study has compared "working area," "department" or "hospital type" concepts. Few comparative studies have been conducted using concepts of interest. For example, authentic leadership was linked to empowerment and burnout (Laschinger et al., 2013) and nurses' satisfaction with safety climates (Vatani et al., 2021). No research has examined authentic leadership in Jordan's nursing and health-care context. Few studies focused on the safety climate other than authentic leadership (Abualrub et al., 2012) or the safety culture in Jordan rather than the safety climate (Khater et al., 2015).
目的本研究旨在根据不同的工作领域和医院类型,比较护士的真实领导力以及对安全氛围和概念协会的看法。设计/方法/方法采用横断面设计对314名约旦护士进行了这项比较研究。采用真实领导力问卷(ALQ)和安全氛围调查(SCS)。私立医院的医生受教育程度更高。真正的领导是温和的。单位护士的ALQ和分量表平均得分较高。武装部队医院的ALQ分量表最高,而政府医院则最低。ALQ平均得分有利于军队医院。政府医院的安全环境很差。病房护士的SCS平均值高于病房护士。军队、政府和私立医院被评为最安全的医院。军队医院护士的SCS得分较高。护士的ALQ和安全气氛感知是适度积极的。研究局限性/启示建议在未来的研究中使用更大、随机和同等规模的样本,以总结不同的工作领域和医院。还建议在使用不同统计方法的进一步研究中报告置信区间,以提高解释统计显著性变量时的置信度。其他中介、调节和预测变量可以在不同的工作领域和医院类型之间进行研究和比较。样本特征应在下一次计划研究中作为混杂变量进行处理,使用各种方法控制混杂变量,如随机化、限制、匹配、回归和统计控制。作者计划通过将混杂变量输入回归模型来对其进行统计控制。未来的研究可以调查安全文化;安全文化和安全氛围都是形成性和包容性的术语(Experts Insight,2017)。实践意义这篇论文填补了文献和实践的空白。真正的领导力与安全氛围观念有关,在不同的工作领域和医院也有所不同。需要采取干预措施,以改善人们对安全气候的看法,并在所有环境和医院中促进真正的领导力。军队医院在护士对真实领导力和安全氛围的认知方面排名最高。社会影响目前的研究表明,真正的领导力和安全氛围测量之间的良好联系适用于许多高风险机构,包括公立和私立医院。有必要将真正的领导力对安全环境的影响纳入护理课程和继续教育课程。这可以通过实施实践活动,然后进行信息和反思对话,强调真正的领导力和安全氛围测量之间的联系来付诸行动。根据这项研究的结果,真正的领导力似乎是改变护士对安全环境看法的基本障碍。ORIGINALITY/VALUEAuthentic领导风格在医疗保健部门是一个相对较新的概念,其与安全气候安全的联系仍需要经验证据。目前尚不清楚领导力是如何产生更有效的结果的(Maziero等人,2020)。很少有研究同时调查真实领导力和护理安全氛围的概念(Dirik和Integeller,2017;Lee等人,2019a;Woo和Han,2018)。除了研究的稀缺性之外,没有任何研究比较“工作区”、“科室”或“医院类型”的概念。很少使用感兴趣的概念进行比较研究。例如,真正的领导力与赋权和倦怠(Laschinger et al.,2013)以及护士对安全环境的满意度(Vatani et al.,2021)有关。没有任何研究考察约旦护理和医疗保健领域的真正领导力。除了真正的领导力(Abualrub et al.,2012)或约旦的安全文化之外,很少有研究关注安全氛围,而不是安全氛围(Khater et al.,2015)。