Healthy Workplaces and Ethical Environments: A Staff Nurse's Perspective
@article{Browne2009HealthyWA,
title={Healthy Workplaces and Ethical Environments: A Staff Nurse's Perspective},
author={Jennifer Browne},
journal={Critical Care Nursing Quarterly},
year={2009},
volume={32},
pages={253–261}
}Healthy workplaces contribute to improved patient safety and job satisfaction. In the development of healthy workplace cultures, various frameworks have been offered as strategy guides. There has also been a growing body of evidence that ethical climates and education can positively influence patient safety and job satisfaction. Within an ethical context, the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses's Standards for Establishing and Sustaining Healthy Work Environments have been examined. It…
6 Citations
Relationships between organizational and individual support, nurses’ ethical competence, ethical safety, and work satisfaction
- Medicine, BusinessHealth care management review
- 2018
Findings confirm that organizational level support for ethical competence improves nurses’ work satisfaction and show that individual level support improves Nurses’ sense of ethical safety, and both organizational and individual support strengthen nurses” ethical competence.
Workplace culture among operating room nurses.
- MedicineJournal of nursing management
- 2016
A need to recognise the factors that cause job stress to nurse anaesthetists is raised, and it is essential that nurse managers learn to recognised the different expressions of workplace culture.
Developing Professional Practice and Ethics Engagement: A Leadership Model.
- MedicineNursing administration quarterly
- 2017
A reflective practice intervention in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit of an urban academic medical center led by the unit nursing director and the hospital's nurse ethicist is described, which valued the presence of nurse leaders as affirming the importance of practice development and of witnessing the experience of staff nurses.
Nurses and Their Work in Hospitals: Ruled by Embedded Ideologies and Moving Discourses
- Education
- 2012
A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Education, University of Regina, vi, 235l.
Operating room nurses' experiences of skin preparation in connection with orthopaedic surgery: A focus group study.
- MedicineInternational journal of nursing practice
- 2020
To deepen the understanding of skin preparation within an orthopaedic surgical setting from the operating room nurse perspective, focus group interviews were conducted at four hospitals in Sweden using procedures developed by Krueger and Casey.
An examination of the impact of medical-surgical nursing unit configuration on nurses’ communication using space syntax theory.
- Medicine
- 2010
This dissertation aims to provide a history of urban design in the United States from 1989 to 2002, a period chosen in order to explore its roots as well as specific cases up to and including the year in which Beatrix Potter wrote her M.S. thesis.
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 41 REFERENCES
Ethical Climate in Nursing Practice: The Leader's Role
- MedicineJONA'S healthcare law, ethics and regulation
- 2005
The nurse leader's role in ensuring congruence between caring missions and caring practices is discussed and strategies to create a positive ethical climate for nursing practice are provided.
The Devaluation of Nursing: a Position Statement
- Political Science, MedicineNursing ethics
- 2008
The indications are that nurses perceive themselves as devalued socially, and that other health care professionals do not give nursing the same status as other, socially more prestigious professions, such as medicine.
The relationship between the application of the nursing ethical code and nurses' work satisfaction.
- Medicine, BusinessInternational journal of nursing practice
- 2003
It is highlighted that professionalization, manifested by the ethical code, should be applied on an everyday basis in the workplace as the 'ethical gap' did not correlate directly with work satisfaction.
Ethical climate, ethics stress, and the job satisfaction of nurses and social workers in the United States.
- Political ScienceSocial science & medicine
- 2007
Ethical environment: reports of practicing nurses.
- MedicineThe Nursing clinics of North America
- 1998
Reports from the development of the Ethics Environment Questionnaire identify three critical features for ethical environments in health care settings of registered nurses. They are the ability of…
Ethical Drift: When Good People Do Bad Things
- MedicineJONA'S healthcare law, ethics and regulation
- 2006
It is imperative for nurse managers and executives to be aware of the danger that workplace pressures pose in encouraging ethical drift at all levels of nursing, and to take steps to prevent this phenomena from occurring in their facilities.
The Culture of Patient Safety
- MedicineJONA'S healthcare law, ethics and regulation
- 2002
The nurse hospitalist, an advanced practice nurse, is proposed as a daily teacher and facilitator for hospital nurses based on a curriculum of day-to-day examples of good patient care through training and observation of patient care as it is being given.
Ethics: the evidence of leadership.
- Medicine, Political ScienceThe health care manager
- 2007
An overview of the history and philosophy of ethics is provided along with definitions, guidelines, and a model to assist the leadership in health care organization to pursue and to adhere to a more ethical course.
Hospital ethical climates and registered nurses' turnover intentions.
- MedicineJournal of nursing scholarship : an official publication of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing
- 2005
Of the variables included in this analysis, the hospital ethical climate was most important in explaining nurses' positional and professional turnover intentions.