Do Australian public and nonprofit nurses cope with administrative stressors?


Autoria(s): Teo, Stephen; Newton, Cameron J.; Chang, Esther; Pick, David; Yeung, Melissa
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

The nursing profession in Australia and other OECD countries such as the USA and the UK, have focused on ways to recruit and retain nurses (e.g., Bartram, Joiner, & Stanton, 2004). Research has shown that the most common factors impacting negatively on retention include sources of nursing stress such as workload and work environment. While the literature has shown that nursing staff encounter these stressors, studies do not examine the effects of stress caused by an increasing degree of administrative demand placed on nurses, caused by the new public management (NPM) reform in public and nonprofit (PNP) health care organizations. At best, some studies have alluded to some aspects of administrative related stressors (vis-a-vis nursing related stressors such as death, sickness, etc), but they have not been examined in any detail. Similarly, extant research has not examined how nurses cope with these administrative stressors. These will be the main aims of the present study.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/45623/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/45623/2/45623.pdf

http://meeting.aomonline.org/2011/component/content/article/46

Teo, Stephen, Newton, Cameron J., Chang, Esther, Pick, David, & Yeung, Melissa (2011) Do Australian public and nonprofit nurses cope with administrative stressors? In Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management : East Meets West – Enlightening, Balancing, Transcending, 12 – 16 August 2011, San Antonio, Texas.

Direitos

Copyright 2011 [please consult the author]

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Management

Palavras-Chave #150311 Organisational Behaviour #Public Nurses #Nonprofit Nurses #Coping Strategies #Administrative Stressors #Australia
Tipo

Conference Paper