The associations between work-life balance behaviours, teamwork climate and safety climate: cross-sectional survey introducing the work-life climate scale, psychometric properties, benchmarking data and future directions

被引:69
|
作者
Sexton, J. Bryan [1 ,2 ]
Schwartz, Stephanie P. [3 ]
Chadwick, Whitney A. [4 ]
Rehder, Kyle J. [1 ,3 ]
Bae, Jonathan [5 ]
Bokovoy, Joanna [6 ]
Doram, Keith [6 ]
Sotile, Wayne [7 ]
Adair, Kathryn C. [1 ]
Profit, Jochen [8 ,9 ]
机构
[1] Duke Univ Hlth Syst, Duke Patient Safety Ctr, Durham, NC USA
[2] Duke Univ, Dept Psychiat, Sch Med, Duke Univ Hlth Syst, Durham, NC 27706 USA
[3] Duke Childrens Hosp & Hlth Ctr, Dept Pediat, Div Pediat Crit Care Med, Durham, NC USA
[4] Lucile Salter Packard Childrens Hosp Stanford, Dept Pediat, Palo Alto, CA USA
[5] Duke Univ Hlth Syst, Dept Med, Duke Hosp Med, Durham, NC USA
[6] Adventist Hlth, Roseville, CA USA
[7] Sotile Ctr Resilience, Davidson, NC USA
[8] Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Div Neonatol, Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA
[9] Lucile Packard Childrens Hosp, Palo Alto, CA USA
关键词
FAMILY CONFLICT; CARE; PHYSICIANS; SATISFACTION; CULTURE; BURNOUT;
D O I
10.1136/bmjqs-2016-006032
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Improving the resiliency of healthcare workers is a national imperative, driven in part by healthcare workers having minimal exposure to the skills and culture to achieve work-life balance (WLB). Regardless of current policies, healthcare workers feel compelled to work more and take less time to recover from work. Satisfaction with WLB has been measured, as has work-life conflict, but how frequently healthcare workers engage in specific WLB behaviours is rarely assessed. Measurement of behaviours may have advantages over measurement of perceptions; behaviours more accurately reflect WLB and can be targeted by leaders for improvement. Objectives 1. To describe a novel survey scale for evaluating work-life climate based on specific behavioural frequencies in healthcare workers. 2. To evaluate the scale's psychometric properties and provide benchmarking data from a large healthcare system. 3. To investigate associations between work-life climate, teamwork climate and safety climate. Methods Cross-sectional survey study of US healthcare workers within a large healthcare system. Results 7923 of 9199 eligible healthcare workers across 325 work settings within 16 hospitals completed the survey in 2009 (86% response rate). The overall work-life climate scale internal consistency was Cronbach alpha=0.790. t-Tests of top versus bottom quartile work settings revealed that positive work-life climate was associated with better teamwork climate, safety climate and increased participation in safety leadership WalkRounds with feedback (p<0.001). Univariate analysis of variance demonstrated differences that varied significantly in WLB between healthcare worker role, hospitals and work setting. Conclusions The work-life climate scale exhibits strong psychometric properties, elicits results that vary widely by work setting, discriminates between positive and negative workplace norms, and aligns well with other culture constructs that have been found to correlate with clinical outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:632 / 640
页数:9
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