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Maternity Nurses' Work Instability, Job Satisfaction, and Perinatal Missed Care During Labor and Birth: The Mediating Roles of Practice Environment and Burnout

ABSTRACT

Background

Nurses' burnout, work instability (WI), and job satisfaction (JS) in their practice environment (PE) are well established in the literature. However, perinatal missed care (PMC), a subset of missed nursing care, remains underreported among maternity nurses.

Aim

To examine the mediating role of PE and burnout in the associations of WI, JS, and PMC among maternity nurses.

Methods

A cross-sectional and correlational study employed consecutive sampling to recruit maternity nurses (n = 312) from five hospitals in Saudi Arabia (three government and two private hospitals in Hail and Makkah regions, respectively). Maternity staff nurses, regardless of their sex, years of professional nursing experience, or nationality, who met inclusion criteria were included in this study. Data was collected from July to September 2024 using four standardized self-report scales. Structural equation modeling was utilized for statistical analyses.

Results

Maternity nurses' WI negatively influenced PE (β = −0.23, p = 0.014), while positively affected PMC (β = 0.15, p = 0.031). The PE positively affected JS (β = 0.24, p = 0.034) but had a negative effect on burnout (β = −0.24, p = 0.007) and PMC (β = −0.21, p = 0.038). Burnout negatively affected JS (β = −0.25, p = 0.028), while positively associated with PMC (β = 0.20, p = 0.022). PE mediated the associations between WI and burnout (β = 0.05, p = 0.019), JS (β = −0.07, p = 0.020), and PMC (β = −0.06, p = 0.008). Meanwhile, burnout mediated between PE and JS (β = 0.05, p = 0.030) and PMC (β = −0.04, p = 0.023).

Linking Evidence to Action

Understanding the relationships among maternity nurses' burnout, JS, PE, and PMC is key to improving the quality of perinatal care and ensuring the patients' well-being. By focusing on strategies to enhance the PE (e.g., adequate staffing and resources, improved nurse–patient ratio), reduce burnout (e.g., meditation and mindfulness programs, coping intervention programs), and improve JS (e.g., work schedule flexibility, facilitate work-life balance, staff professional development), healthcare organizations can mitigate the occurrence of PMC.

Linking patient safety, caring behaviours and professional self‐efficacy with missed nursing care among Filipino emergency room nurses: A structural equation model study

Abstract

Aims

To investigate the interrelationships of patient safety, caring behaviours, professional self-efficacy and missed nursing care among emergency room nurses.

Design

Cross-sectional, correlational study.

Methods

Filipino emergency room nurses (n = 345) participated via convenience sampling from September 2023 to January 2024. Four validated self-report scales were used to collect data and were analysed using Spearman rho, covariance-based structural equation modelling, mediation and path analyses.

Results

The emerging model of study variables displayed satisfactory fit indices. Patient safety directly influenced caring behaviours and professional self-efficacy, while negatively influencing missed nursing care. Caring behaviours directly and indirectly affected professional self-efficacy and missed nursing care, respectively. Professional self-efficacy negatively influences missed nursing care. Finally, caring behaviours and professional self-efficacy were significant mediators between the association of patient safety and missed nursing care.

Conclusion

Caring behaviours and professional self-efficacy of emergency room nurses demonstrated mediating effects that can potentially improve patient safety practices thereby minimizing unfinished or missed nursing care.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

Nurses and healthcare organizations should commit to consistently maintain a workplace culture that fosters patient safety, caring behaviours and professional self-efficacy to minimize avoidable injuries and omitting nursing care tasks.

Reporting Method

STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology (STROBE).

Patient or Public Contribution

No Patient or Public Contribution.

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