The Relationship between Nursing Staff's Change Fatigue, Psychological Resilience, and Job Satisfaction at Mansoura University Hospital | ||||
Egyptian Journal of Health Care | ||||
Article 105, Volume 13, Issue 2, June 2022, Page 1478-1493 PDF (869.65 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/ejhc.2022.245105 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Authors | ||||
Eman Sameh Abd ELhay1; Abdel-Hady El-Gilany2; Islam Sameh Abd- ELhay3 | ||||
1Lecturer, Department of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Mansoura University, | ||||
2Prof. Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Egypt | ||||
3Lecturer, Department of Nursing Administration, Faculty of Nursing, Mansoura University, Egypt | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Change fatigue is an overwhelming emotion of stress, tiredness, and burnout caused by feelings of ambivalence and impotence in the workplace. In addition to personal stress, change fatigue may negatively affect nurses' job satisfaction and psychological resilience and increased the turnover of nurses. Aim: Explore the relationship between change fatigue, psychological resilience, and job satisfaction of nursing staff at Mansoura university hospital. Subjects& Methods: a correlation descriptive design was applied, and conducted among 187 nursing staff working at Mansoura University Hospitals. Data were collected from nursing staff by using three tools via Google form: (a) Change Fatigue scale, (b) Connor-Davidson Resilience scale, and (c) McCloskey/Mueller Satisfaction Scale. Results: reveals that there is a correlation between change fatigue, job satisfaction, and psychological resilience. Change fatigue had a statistically significant negative correlated with psychological resilience. There is a statistically significant positive correlation was present between sub-scales of job satisfaction and staff nurses' place of work, nurses who had diplomas, and those aged more than 45 years. A statistically significant difference was present between staff nurses' who work at (Urology center), nurses’ experience (6-10 years), and psychological resilience domain. Conclusion: Nursing Staff's offered important insight into the effect of change fatigue on their psychological resilience and job satisfaction. Nursing staff are negatively influenced by change fatigue and positively influenced by resilience. Recommendations: This work was recommended that using measures to reduce change fatigue in nursing staff, which can improve nurse job satisfaction and workplace conditions. Offering psychological resilience training programs and a comprehensive approach to change fatigue management may counter-act these negative effects of change fatigue. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
Nurses; Psychological Resilience; Change fatigue; job satisfaction | ||||
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