The Effect of Self-Esteem, Bullying, and Harassment on Nurse Turnover Intention

<p> Currently there is a high rate of registered nurse (RN) turnover due in part to bullying and harassment among peers; which fosters lower quality nursing care, jeopardizes patient safety, and increases healthcare costs. The purpose of this quantitative nonexperimental study was to examine t...

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Main Author: Arand, Joyce Richelle
Language:EN
Published: Walden University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=13862882
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-138628822019-05-02T16:54:16Z The Effect of Self-Esteem, Bullying, and Harassment on Nurse Turnover Intention Arand, Joyce Richelle Nursing|Occupational psychology|Organizational behavior <p> Currently there is a high rate of registered nurse (RN) turnover due in part to bullying and harassment among peers; which fosters lower quality nursing care, jeopardizes patient safety, and increases healthcare costs. The purpose of this quantitative nonexperimental study was to examine the relationship between inpatient nurses&rsquo; individual self-esteem and reported bullying and harassment with their intent to leave their job. Two theories were used to provide structure to this work: cognitive experimental self theory and oppressed group theory. Data were collected using the Negative Acts Questionnaire, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, and the Turnover Intentions Measure. All RNs in a Midwestern state were emailed an invitation link to the instruments housed on SurveyMonkey. Only those respondents who claimed to be inpatient RNs were included in the study (<i>n</i> = 770). The three research questions asked about bullying and harassment among inpatient RNs, about the self-esteem of RNs who experienced bullying and harassment and those who have not, and if those RNs who experienced bullying and harassments intended to leave their jobs. With a 2.1% response rate, results indicated that there was a relationship among RNs and bullying and harassment, the self-esteem of RNs who did not experience bullying and harassment was higher than those who did experience bullying and harassment, and there was a positive relationship between RNs experiencing bullying and harassment and their intent to leave their jobs. This research suggests that if bullying and harassment patterns among RNs are identified sooner, RN turnover can be reduced, patient care quality and safety can be improved, and U.S. healthcare costs can decrease. </p><p> Walden University 2019-04-26 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=13862882 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Nursing|Occupational psychology|Organizational behavior
spellingShingle Nursing|Occupational psychology|Organizational behavior
Arand, Joyce Richelle
The Effect of Self-Esteem, Bullying, and Harassment on Nurse Turnover Intention
description <p> Currently there is a high rate of registered nurse (RN) turnover due in part to bullying and harassment among peers; which fosters lower quality nursing care, jeopardizes patient safety, and increases healthcare costs. The purpose of this quantitative nonexperimental study was to examine the relationship between inpatient nurses&rsquo; individual self-esteem and reported bullying and harassment with their intent to leave their job. Two theories were used to provide structure to this work: cognitive experimental self theory and oppressed group theory. Data were collected using the Negative Acts Questionnaire, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, and the Turnover Intentions Measure. All RNs in a Midwestern state were emailed an invitation link to the instruments housed on SurveyMonkey. Only those respondents who claimed to be inpatient RNs were included in the study (<i>n</i> = 770). The three research questions asked about bullying and harassment among inpatient RNs, about the self-esteem of RNs who experienced bullying and harassment and those who have not, and if those RNs who experienced bullying and harassments intended to leave their jobs. With a 2.1% response rate, results indicated that there was a relationship among RNs and bullying and harassment, the self-esteem of RNs who did not experience bullying and harassment was higher than those who did experience bullying and harassment, and there was a positive relationship between RNs experiencing bullying and harassment and their intent to leave their jobs. This research suggests that if bullying and harassment patterns among RNs are identified sooner, RN turnover can be reduced, patient care quality and safety can be improved, and U.S. healthcare costs can decrease. </p><p>
author Arand, Joyce Richelle
author_facet Arand, Joyce Richelle
author_sort Arand, Joyce Richelle
title The Effect of Self-Esteem, Bullying, and Harassment on Nurse Turnover Intention
title_short The Effect of Self-Esteem, Bullying, and Harassment on Nurse Turnover Intention
title_full The Effect of Self-Esteem, Bullying, and Harassment on Nurse Turnover Intention
title_fullStr The Effect of Self-Esteem, Bullying, and Harassment on Nurse Turnover Intention
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Self-Esteem, Bullying, and Harassment on Nurse Turnover Intention
title_sort effect of self-esteem, bullying, and harassment on nurse turnover intention
publisher Walden University
publishDate 2019
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=13862882
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