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Moderating effects of nurses' organizational justice between organizational support and organizational citizenship behaviors for evidence-based practice.
Worldviews Evid Based Nurs. 2014 Oct; 11(5):332-40.WE

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Lack of existing literature on the correlation among organizational justice, organizational support, and organizational citizenship behaviors has created a research gap in previous evidence-based practice (EBP) studies on nursing personnel.

AIMS

To investigate whether organizational justice among nurses has a moderating effect between their organizational support and organizational citizenship behaviors in order to bridge such a gap of existing literature with the EBP study on nursing personnel.

METHODS

Nursing staff of one large and influential hospital in Taiwan was surveyed. Four hundred questionnaires were distributed, and 386 were collected with a valid response rate of 96.50%. SPSS 17.0 and Amos 17.0 statistical software packages were used for data analysis.

RESULTS

Nurses' organizational support positively influences their organizational citizenship behaviors, and their organizational justice perception has a positive moderating effect between organizational support and organizational citizenship behaviors.

LINKING EVIDENCE TO ACTION

Results call hospitals' attention to the type of individual behaviors that may improve organizational performance. When nursing staff perceive fair and impartial treatment by the organization and supportive emotional attachment, behaviors beneficial for the organization are expressed in return. Subjective perceptions of nursing staff play an important role in organizational exchange relationship; the higher the degree of nursing staff's perceived organizational justice, the higher the degree of their organizational support, perception, and exhibition of organizational citizenship behaviors such as altruistic behavior and dedication to the work.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Assistant Professor, R.O.C. Naval Academy, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

25132135

Citation

Chang, Ching-Sheng. "Moderating Effects of Nurses' Organizational Justice Between Organizational Support and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors for Evidence-based Practice." Worldviews On Evidence-based Nursing, vol. 11, no. 5, 2014, pp. 332-40.
Chang CS. Moderating effects of nurses' organizational justice between organizational support and organizational citizenship behaviors for evidence-based practice. Worldviews Evid Based Nurs. 2014;11(5):332-40.
Chang, C. S. (2014). Moderating effects of nurses' organizational justice between organizational support and organizational citizenship behaviors for evidence-based practice. Worldviews On Evidence-based Nursing, 11(5), 332-40. https://doi.org/10.1111/wvn.12054
Chang CS. Moderating Effects of Nurses' Organizational Justice Between Organizational Support and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors for Evidence-based Practice. Worldviews Evid Based Nurs. 2014;11(5):332-40. PubMed PMID: 25132135.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Moderating effects of nurses' organizational justice between organizational support and organizational citizenship behaviors for evidence-based practice. A1 - Chang,Ching-Sheng, Y1 - 2014/08/18/ PY - 2014/03/02/accepted PY - 2014/8/19/entrez PY - 2014/8/19/pubmed PY - 2015/7/3/medline KW - moderating effect KW - nursing staff KW - organizational citizenship behaviors KW - organizational justice KW - organizational support SP - 332 EP - 40 JF - Worldviews on evidence-based nursing JO - Worldviews Evid Based Nurs VL - 11 IS - 5 N2 - BACKGROUND: Lack of existing literature on the correlation among organizational justice, organizational support, and organizational citizenship behaviors has created a research gap in previous evidence-based practice (EBP) studies on nursing personnel. AIMS: To investigate whether organizational justice among nurses has a moderating effect between their organizational support and organizational citizenship behaviors in order to bridge such a gap of existing literature with the EBP study on nursing personnel. METHODS: Nursing staff of one large and influential hospital in Taiwan was surveyed. Four hundred questionnaires were distributed, and 386 were collected with a valid response rate of 96.50%. SPSS 17.0 and Amos 17.0 statistical software packages were used for data analysis. RESULTS: Nurses' organizational support positively influences their organizational citizenship behaviors, and their organizational justice perception has a positive moderating effect between organizational support and organizational citizenship behaviors. LINKING EVIDENCE TO ACTION: Results call hospitals' attention to the type of individual behaviors that may improve organizational performance. When nursing staff perceive fair and impartial treatment by the organization and supportive emotional attachment, behaviors beneficial for the organization are expressed in return. Subjective perceptions of nursing staff play an important role in organizational exchange relationship; the higher the degree of nursing staff's perceived organizational justice, the higher the degree of their organizational support, perception, and exhibition of organizational citizenship behaviors such as altruistic behavior and dedication to the work. SN - 1741-6787 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/25132135/Moderating_effects_of_nurses'_organizational_justice_between_organizational_support_and_organizational_citizenship_behaviors_for_evidence_based_practice_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -