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Nursing Care as Perceived by Nurses Working in Disability Community Settings in Greece

INTRODUCTION-AIM: The concept of nursing care in learning disability community settings has not been investigated in Greece. The aim of this paper is to investigate how nurses working in learning disability community settings perceive the meaning of nursing care. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The sample con...

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Autores principales: Fotiadou, Elpida, Malliarou, Maria, Zetta, Stella, Gouva, Mary, Kotrotsiou, Evaggelia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Canadian Center of Science and Education 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4803940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26383223
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v8n2p209
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author Fotiadou, Elpida
Malliarou, Maria
Zetta, Stella
Gouva, Mary
Kotrotsiou, Evaggelia
author_facet Fotiadou, Elpida
Malliarou, Maria
Zetta, Stella
Gouva, Mary
Kotrotsiou, Evaggelia
author_sort Fotiadou, Elpida
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION-AIM: The concept of nursing care in learning disability community settings has not been investigated in Greece. The aim of this paper is to investigate how nurses working in learning disability community settings perceive the meaning of nursing care. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The sample consisted of 100 nurses and nursing assistants working in a social care hospice. Participants were asked to answer questions about socio- demographic characteristics of the sample and fill in a questionnaire of care (GR-NDI-24), the “Job-Communication-Satisfaction-Importance” (JCSI) questionnaire and the altruism scale of Ahmed and Jackson. The data analysis was realized with statistical methods of descriptive and inductive statistics. The analysis was made with the use of SPSS (version 19). RESULTS: The majority of the sample was women (78%). The majority of participants were married (66 %), DE graduates (66%) without postgraduate studies (96.7%). The mean age of respondents was 36.98±6.70 years. On the scales of caring and altruism, the mean values were 40.89±15.87 and 28.12±4.16 respectively. Very or fully satisfied with his work was 72% of the sample. The scope of work emerges as the most important factor influencing job satisfaction. The wages and working conditions (73% and 40% respectively) are the parameters of work which gathers the most dissatisfaction, while the salary is emerging as the most important parameter, the improvement of which would provide the highest satisfaction. Marginally statistically significant difference was observed in the range between TE graduates (d=40) and those of the DE grade (d=37), p=0.053. No statistically significant differences were observed in relation to other working and demographic characteristics (p>0.05). Greater care importance was associated with greater job satisfaction (p<0.01), while the latter was associated with high levels of altruism (p<0.05). CONCLUSION: The scope of work provides high satisfaction to nurses working in social care hospices, while the salary is not satisfactory. Nurses’ aides appeared highly sensitive to care issues. A multidimensional approach to the materiality of care and job satisfaction in future research will allow to further highlight all the aspects affecting job satisfaction and performance of nurses. This will identify critical parameters of nursing care in healthcare centers for the chronically ill.
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spelling pubmed-48039402016-04-21 Nursing Care as Perceived by Nurses Working in Disability Community Settings in Greece Fotiadou, Elpida Malliarou, Maria Zetta, Stella Gouva, Mary Kotrotsiou, Evaggelia Glob J Health Sci Articles INTRODUCTION-AIM: The concept of nursing care in learning disability community settings has not been investigated in Greece. The aim of this paper is to investigate how nurses working in learning disability community settings perceive the meaning of nursing care. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The sample consisted of 100 nurses and nursing assistants working in a social care hospice. Participants were asked to answer questions about socio- demographic characteristics of the sample and fill in a questionnaire of care (GR-NDI-24), the “Job-Communication-Satisfaction-Importance” (JCSI) questionnaire and the altruism scale of Ahmed and Jackson. The data analysis was realized with statistical methods of descriptive and inductive statistics. The analysis was made with the use of SPSS (version 19). RESULTS: The majority of the sample was women (78%). The majority of participants were married (66 %), DE graduates (66%) without postgraduate studies (96.7%). The mean age of respondents was 36.98±6.70 years. On the scales of caring and altruism, the mean values were 40.89±15.87 and 28.12±4.16 respectively. Very or fully satisfied with his work was 72% of the sample. The scope of work emerges as the most important factor influencing job satisfaction. The wages and working conditions (73% and 40% respectively) are the parameters of work which gathers the most dissatisfaction, while the salary is emerging as the most important parameter, the improvement of which would provide the highest satisfaction. Marginally statistically significant difference was observed in the range between TE graduates (d=40) and those of the DE grade (d=37), p=0.053. No statistically significant differences were observed in relation to other working and demographic characteristics (p>0.05). Greater care importance was associated with greater job satisfaction (p<0.01), while the latter was associated with high levels of altruism (p<0.05). CONCLUSION: The scope of work provides high satisfaction to nurses working in social care hospices, while the salary is not satisfactory. Nurses’ aides appeared highly sensitive to care issues. A multidimensional approach to the materiality of care and job satisfaction in future research will allow to further highlight all the aspects affecting job satisfaction and performance of nurses. This will identify critical parameters of nursing care in healthcare centers for the chronically ill. Canadian Center of Science and Education 2016-02 2015-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4803940/ /pubmed/26383223 http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v8n2p209 Text en Copyright: © Canadian Center of Science and Education http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Fotiadou, Elpida
Malliarou, Maria
Zetta, Stella
Gouva, Mary
Kotrotsiou, Evaggelia
Nursing Care as Perceived by Nurses Working in Disability Community Settings in Greece
title Nursing Care as Perceived by Nurses Working in Disability Community Settings in Greece
title_full Nursing Care as Perceived by Nurses Working in Disability Community Settings in Greece
title_fullStr Nursing Care as Perceived by Nurses Working in Disability Community Settings in Greece
title_full_unstemmed Nursing Care as Perceived by Nurses Working in Disability Community Settings in Greece
title_short Nursing Care as Perceived by Nurses Working in Disability Community Settings in Greece
title_sort nursing care as perceived by nurses working in disability community settings in greece
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4803940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26383223
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v8n2p209
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