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Reliability, validity, and health issues arising from questionnaires used to measure Psychosocial and Organizational Work Factors (POWFs) among hospital nurses: a critical review.

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TLDR
The Practice Environment Scale–Nursing Work Index (PES–NWI) seems to be one of the most promising instruments because of its appropriateness, its structure, which has a rather good fit, and its ability to discriminate magnet hospitals like other NWI derivates (discriminant validity).
Abstract
This systematic review assesses the validity of epidemiological questionnaires used to measure psychosocial and organizational work factors (POWFs) in nurses Of the 632 articles published between 1980 and July 2008 identified in this review, 108 provide some data concerning analysis of the intrinsic characteristics of such instruments (content validity or conceptual basis, reliability, validation of internal construction) and their external validity with respect to health aspects (concurrent validity and predictive validity) Psychometric properties of generalist questionnaires validated among blue collar or white collar workers were also assessed in the nurse population The Job Content Questionnaire (JCQ), because of its longevity and reputation, was the generalist questionnaire most used among this population Although its structure often raises questions in the nurse population, its dimensions (mainly the control one) have been shown to be predictive of some health outcomes measured with "objective" indicators concerning absenteeism, injuries, and musculoskeletal disorders Effort Reward Imbalance (ERI), which has a structure more stable among the nurse population, has shown concurrent validity in terms of intent to leave the nursing profession No questionnaire specifically designed for nurses can claim to satisfy all of the recommendations in terms of internal validity Nevertheless, the Practice Environment Scale-Nursing Work Index (PES-NWI) seems to be one of the most promising instruments because of its appropriateness (content validity), its structure, which has a rather good fit (construct validity), its ability to discriminate magnet hospitals like other NWI derivates (discriminant validity), and it has also been associated in cross-sectional studies with health outcomes, especially nurses' self-assessed mental health but also with patients' health outcomes objectively assessed (concurrent validity) However, elements for predictive validity are still lacking with NWI derivates The Discussion provides recommendations for measuring POWFs, encompassing the use of external validated measurements

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DatasetDOI

Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index

TL;DR: Five subscales were derived from the Nursing Work Index to measure the hospital nursing practice environment, using 1985-1986 nurse data from 16 magnet hospitals, and all measures were highly reliable at the nurse and hospital levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of nurse staffing and nurse education on patient deaths in hospitals with different nurse work environments.

TL;DR: Although the positive effect of increasing percentages of Bachelors of Science in Nursing Degree nurses is consistent across all hospitals, lowering the patient-to-nurse ratios markedly improves patient outcomes in hospitals with good work environments, slightly improves them in hospitalswith average environments, and has no effect in hospitalsWith poor environments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of nurse staffing and nurse education on patient deaths in hospitals with different nurse work environments.

TL;DR: Although the positive effect of increasing percentages of Bachelors of Science in Nursing Degree nurses is consistent across all hospitals, lowering the patient-to-nurse ratios markedly improves patient outcomes in hospitals with good work environments, slightly improves them in hospital with average environments, and has no effect in hospitalsWith poor environments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global use of the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index.

TL;DR: Recommendations for future research use include reducing scale length, using consistent scoring methods, considering the impact of various modifications on the basis of cultural and clinical setting nuances, and using the measure in longitudinal and intervention research designs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational determinants of work outcomes and quality care ratings among Army Medical Department registered nurses.

TL;DR: Poor quality work environments are associated with less favorable RN work outcomes and quality of care ratings in AMEDD hospitals in the U.S. Similar to findings in civilian samples
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Job Content Questionnaire (JCQ): an instrument for internationally comparative assessments of psychosocial job characteristics.

TL;DR: Results suggest that psychological job characteristics are more similar across national boundaries than across occupations.
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Using the job demands-resources model to predict burnout and performance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the job demands-resources model to examine the relationship between job characteristics, burnout, and (other-ratings of) performance, and found that job demands (e.g., work pressure and emotional demands) would be the most important antecedents of the exhaustion component of burnout.
Journal ArticleDOI

The measurement of effort-reward imbalance at work: European comparisons.

TL;DR: A psychometrically well-justified measure of work-related stress (ERI) grounded in sociological theory is available for comparative socioepidemiologic investigations in advanced societies within and beyond Europe.

Nurses' Reports On Hospital Care In Five Countriese ways in which nurses' work is structured have left nurses

TL;DR: Reports from 43,000 nurses from more than 700 hospitals in the United States, Canada, England, Scotland, and Germany in 1998-1999 suggest core problems in work design and workforce management threaten the provision of care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nurse Burnout and Patient Satisfaction

TL;DR: Improvements in Nurses’ work environments in hospitals have the potential to simultaneously reduce nurses’ high levels of job burnout and risk of turnover and increase patients’ satisfaction with their care.
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