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Effects of hospital nurses' internalized dominant values, organizational silence, horizontal violence, and organizational communication on patient safety

Title
Effects of hospital nurses' internalized dominant values, organizational silence, horizontal violence, and organizational communication on patient safety
Authors
Doo, Eun-YoungKim, Miyoung
Ewha Authors
김미영
SCOPUS Author ID
김미영scopus
Issue Date
2020
Journal Title
RESEARCH IN NURSING & HEALTH
ISSN
0160-6891JCR Link

1098-240XJCR Link
Citation
RESEARCH IN NURSING & HEALTH vol. 43, no. 5, pp. 499 - 510
Keywords
horizontal violencenurses&aposinternalized dominant valuesorganizational communication satisfactionorganizational silencepatient safety
Publisher
WILEY
Indexed
SCIE; SSCI; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Recent studies have identified common problems with patient safety in hospitals and medical institutions have responded, prioritizing service quality and performance, including patient safety. However, the factors influencing safety for hospital patients are still being examined and clarified. We aimed to investigate how hospital nurses' internalized dominant values, organizational silence, horizontal violence, and organizational communication satisfaction can affect patient safety and to construct and verify a hypothetical model describing the relationships between these factors. The participant sample included 301 hospital nurses from four large (>= 500 beds) general hospitals in Gyeonggi-do, South Korea. Data were collected through questionnaires from October to November 2018 and analyzed using SPSS 25.0 and AMOS 22.0. Factors that had direct effects on patient safety were organizational silence (beta = -.130,p < .05) and organizational communication satisfaction (beta = .209,p < .001). Factors that had indirect effects on patient safety were internalized dominant values and horizontal violence. The explanatory power of these variables for patient safety was 7.9%. The results indicate that organizational silence, horizontal violence, and organizational communication satisfaction fully mediated the relationship between nurses' internalized dominant values and patient safety. Our findings may be useful to hospital administrators and managers in identifying and analyzing these organizational characteristics in their institutions. Further, the model described in the results may be used to inform the development of educational programs and strategies to improve patient safety by reducing organizational silence and horizontal violence and improving organizational communication.
DOI
10.1002/nur.22067
Appears in Collections:
간호대학 > 간호학전공 > Journal papers
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