When safety climate is not enough: Examining the moderating effects of psychosocial hazards on nurse safety performance

被引:26
|
作者
Manapragada, Archana [1 ,2 ]
Bruk-Lee, Valentina [1 ]
Thompson, Arieana H. [1 ]
Heron, Laura M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Florida Int Univ, Dept Psychol, Miami, FL 33199 USA
[2] PwC, Mclean, VA USA
关键词
conflict; nurses; psychosocial hazards; safety climate; safety performance; support; workload; SOCIAL SUPPORT; PSYCHOLOGICAL EMPOWERMENT; STRUCTURAL EMPOWERMENT; WORK-ENVIRONMENT; JOB STRESSORS; BURNOUT; OUTCOMES; COMMUNICATION; CONFLICT; SCALE;
D O I
10.1111/jan.13911
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Aim To examine the association between components of safety climate and psychosocial hazards with safe work behaviours and test the moderating effects of psychosocial hazards on the safety climate-safety performance relationships. Background The effects of a strong safety climate on safety performance are well cited, however, the conditions that have an impact on this relationship warrant attention. While the psychosocial hazards commonly reported by nurses are predictors of well-being and job attitudes, evidence suggests that these may also place boundaries on the effects of safety climate on safe work practices. Design This study used a cross-sectional design to collect data from 146 nurses. Methods Participants were recruited through convenience sampling and snowball sampling methods in 2017. Nurses completed an online questionnaire and received a $5 e-gift card as compensation. SPSS v.23 and PROCESS v3.0 were used to analyse the data. Results/Findings A strong safety climate was positively associated with nurses' safety performance. While psychosocial hazards did not predict safety performance, they did moderate the safety climate-performance relationship. High levels of perceived stressors weakened the association between promoting two-way safety communication, the use and implementation of procedures to promote safe work practices and management's endorsement of health and safety with safe work performance. Conclusion The positive effects of safety climate on nurses' safety performance are contingent on the levels of psychosocial hazards nurses experience. When aiming to improve safety performance among nurses, it is important for efforts to also focus on the psychosocial conditions of the work environment.
引用
收藏
页码:1207 / 1218
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Impact of empowering leadership on safety behavior and safety climate: mediating and moderating role of safety monitoring
    AlShemeili, Hasan
    Davidson, Ross
    Khalid, Khalizani
    JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY, 2024, 22 (04) : 1282 - 1305
  • [32] Relationships among safety climate, safety management and safety performance
    Zhang, Jiang S.
    Tao, Jia
    He, Pan P.
    Xiong, Hong Q.
    DISASTER ADVANCES, 2013, 6 : 121 - 130
  • [33] Relationship of Safety Climate and Safety Performance in Hospitals
    Singer, Sara
    Lin, Shoutzu
    Falwell, Alyson
    Gaba, David
    Baker, Laurence
    HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2009, 44 (02) : 399 - 421
  • [34] A correlation among safety leadership, safety climate and safety performance
    Wu, Tsung-Chih
    Chen, Chi-Hsiang
    Li, Chin-Chung
    JOURNAL OF LOSS PREVENTION IN THE PROCESS INDUSTRIES, 2008, 21 (03) : 307 - 318
  • [35] Psychosocial Safety Climate (PSC) In The Future Of Work
    Dollard, Maureen
    SAFETY AND HEALTH AT WORK, 2022, 13 : S81 - S81
  • [36] Psychosocial Safety Climate: Validating the German Questionnaire
    Formazin, Maren
    Ertel, Michael
    Kersten, Norbert
    Nubling, Matthias
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ARBEITS-UND ORGANISATIONSPSYCHOLOGIE, 2022, 66 (03): : 129 - 142
  • [37] Investigating the Effects of Role Demands, Psychosocial Stress Symptoms and Safety Leadership on Mineworkers' Safety Performance
    Zhu, Yongyue
    Quansah, Prince Ewudzie
    Obeng, Anthony Frank
    Cobbinah, Eric
    PSYCHOLOGY RESEARCH AND BEHAVIOR MANAGEMENT, 2020, 13 : 419 - 436
  • [38] Psychosocial Safety Climate as a Management Tool for Employee Engagement and Performance: A Multilevel Analysis
    Idris, Mohd Awang
    Dollard, Maureen F.
    Tuckey, Michelle R.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STRESS MANAGEMENT, 2015, 22 (02) : 183 - 206
  • [39] Curvilinear effects of personality on safety performance: The moderating role of supervisor support
    Yuan, Xiao
    Li, Yongjuan
    Xu, Yaoshan
    Huang, Naixi
    PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2018, 122 : 55 - 61
  • [40] HAZARDS AND SAFETY WHEN WORKING IN CONFINED OR ENCLOSED WORKSPACES
    Neitzel, Dennis K.
    Jo, Alfonso A.
    2018 IEEE IAS ELECTRICAL SAFETY WORKSHOP (ESW 2018), 2018,