Mental health and hospital work. Hospital UNIT, AGE AND GENDER RISK ANALYSIS TOWARDS GOOD PRACTICES for nurses health. Background: Nurses mental health is still a major and unachieved goal in many public hospital settings. Hospital work organization analysis shows differences in health professions, hospital units, age and gender. Objectives. To analyse work organisation and its effects on nurses mental health in three high risks hospital units (Oncoematology, First Aid, General Medicine) in order to improve good practices for nurses health. Methods: The Method of Organizational Congruences (72 hours of observation) has been used to detect organizational constraints and their possible effects on nurses' mental health. General Health Questionnaire (Goldberg D., 12 items) and the Check up Surveys for burnout (Leiter MP and Maslach C.) have been used to evaluate the mental health status of the 80 nurses employed (78[%] women). Results: High emotional work load in Oncoematology Unit, high monotony and repetitiveness with lower emotional load in First Aid Unit, high mental and physical workload in General Medicine Unit. Burnout was significantly higher in General Medicine Unit, followed by First Aid Unit and Oncoematology Unit. Female nurses reported more chronic diseases than males. The GHQ showed high frequency of minor psychiatric disorders (58[%]) in all units, higher in General Medicine Unit (78[%]). Conclusions: The overall results show how organisational constraints and mental health conditions differ per hospital units, age groups and gender. Good nursing practices, to prevent mental health problems, should therefore be developed specifically in each hospital unit according to these results. © PI-ME, Pavia 2015.

Mental health and hospital work: Hospital unit, age and gender risk analysis towards good practices for nurses health [Salute mentale in ospedale: Analisi delle condizioni di rischio per reparto, età e genere orientata alla costruzione di buone pratiche per la salute delle infermiere]

Salerno, S.
2015-01-01

Abstract

Mental health and hospital work. Hospital UNIT, AGE AND GENDER RISK ANALYSIS TOWARDS GOOD PRACTICES for nurses health. Background: Nurses mental health is still a major and unachieved goal in many public hospital settings. Hospital work organization analysis shows differences in health professions, hospital units, age and gender. Objectives. To analyse work organisation and its effects on nurses mental health in three high risks hospital units (Oncoematology, First Aid, General Medicine) in order to improve good practices for nurses health. Methods: The Method of Organizational Congruences (72 hours of observation) has been used to detect organizational constraints and their possible effects on nurses' mental health. General Health Questionnaire (Goldberg D., 12 items) and the Check up Surveys for burnout (Leiter MP and Maslach C.) have been used to evaluate the mental health status of the 80 nurses employed (78[%] women). Results: High emotional work load in Oncoematology Unit, high monotony and repetitiveness with lower emotional load in First Aid Unit, high mental and physical workload in General Medicine Unit. Burnout was significantly higher in General Medicine Unit, followed by First Aid Unit and Oncoematology Unit. Female nurses reported more chronic diseases than males. The GHQ showed high frequency of minor psychiatric disorders (58[%]) in all units, higher in General Medicine Unit (78[%]). Conclusions: The overall results show how organisational constraints and mental health conditions differ per hospital units, age groups and gender. Good nursing practices, to prevent mental health problems, should therefore be developed specifically in each hospital unit according to these results. © PI-ME, Pavia 2015.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12079/2179
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