Aim: To explore the cross-level relationships between group organisational citizenship behaviour, emotional intelligence, work engagement and nurse-patient relationship.
Background: Group-level factors influencing nurse-patient relationship are seldom studied.
Method: A cross-sectional questionnaire survey was conducted among 1,246 nurses from 55 nursing groups in a 3A hospital in China, and the data were analysed by multilevel analysis.
Results: Group organisational citizenship behaviour is positively related to nurse-patient relationship with work engagement as a mediator. Emotional intelligence moderates the relationship between group organisational citizenship behaviour and nurse-patient relationship. Specifically, high emotional intelligence reduces the positive impact of group organisational citizenship behaviour on nurse-patient relationship.
Conclusions: This study provides new insights into the influencing factors of nurse-patient relationship based on the social information processing theory. In groups with high group organisational citizenship, positive work engagement and emotional intelligence, nurses are more likely to deliver better performance in patient care, leading to better nurse-patient relationships.
Implications For Nursing Management: This study suggests that influencing factors at both group and individual levels should be considered while establishing nurse-patient relationships. A positive group climate and personal ability development significantly improve patient care quality.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jonm.13159 | DOI Listing |
J Intellect Disabil
January 2025
Independent Consultant, UK and USA.
Person-centered planning has been shown to benefit people with disabilities and their quality of life. However, we have little knowledge of how person-centered planning can benefit staff and administration within a group home organization, as well as the extent to which it results in changes to organizational practices and procedures, as well as perceptions of people with disabilities. In this qualitative study, we explored the perspectives of organizational employees, an affiliating behavioral consultant, and residents with intellectual and developmental disabilities, taking into consideration key insights from person-centered planning consultant-coaches, to understand the effects of a person-centered planning initiative on the group home organization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNonlinear Dynamics Psychol Life Sci
January 2025
University of Torino, Torino, Italy.
Besides consultants and practitioners, some contributions in the organizational economics literature have advocated substituting internal firms' bureaucracies with markets to regulate internal transactions. However, usually the effects of competition on performance are considered in terms competition across firms or industries. By contrast, other contributions point out that competition is pervasive inside firms as well.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNonlinear Dynamics Psychol Life Sci
January 2025
Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI.
Emergent phenomena exhibit interesting dynamics when considered individually. The present article examines two emergent processes that could be occurring simultaneously in an intense team interaction: the emergence of leaders and the emergence of autonomic synchrony within teams making dynamic decisions. In the framework of panarchy theory and related studies on complex systems, autonomic synchrony would be a fast dynamic that is shaped or controlled by leadership emergence, which is a slower dynamic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNonlinear Dynamics Psychol Life Sci
January 2025
Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI.
The articles in this special issue examine the contributions of Jeffrey A. Goldstein to the understanding of emergence as a formal group of processes. Applications include work teams, organizations, ecologies of organizations, and societies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNurs Open
January 2025
Faculty of Nursing, Atatürk University, Erzurum, Turkey.
Aim: This study was conducted to examine elder abuse and death anxiety in older adults who had chronic diseases.
Design: The present study is a cross-sectional and correlational study.
Methods: This study was conducted with 200 patients who met the research criteria and agreed to participate in the study and who were admitted to the internal medicine outpatient clinics of a university hospital in Elazig, eastern Turkey.
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