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Construction of a new model of job engagement, psychological empowerment and perceived work environment among Chinese registered nurses at four large university hospitals: implications for nurse managers seeking to enhance nursing retention and quality of care.
J Nurs Manag. 2016 Jul; 24(5):646-55.JN

Abstract

AIM

To explore the relationships among perceived work environment, psychological empowerment and job engagement of clinical nurses in Harbin, China.

BACKGROUND

Previous studies have focused on organisational factors or nurses' personal characteristics contributing to job engagement. Limited studies have examined the effects of perceived work environment and psychological empowerment on job engagement among Chinese nurses.

METHOD

A cross-sectional quantitative survey with 923 registered nurses at four large university hospitals in China was carried out. Research instruments included the Chinese versions of the perceived nurse work environment scale, the psychological empowerment scale and the job engagement scale. The relationships of the variables were tested using structural equation modelling.

RESULTS

Structural equation modelling revealed a good fit of the model, χ(2) /df = 4.46, GFI = 0.936, CFI = 0.957. Perceived work environment was a significant positive direct predictor of psychological empowerment and job engagement. Psychological empowerment was a significant positive direct contributor to job engagement and had a mediating effect on the relationship between perceived work environment and job engagement.

CONCLUSIONS

Perceived work environment may result in increased job engagement by facilitating the development of psychological empowerment.

IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING MANAGEMENT

For nurse managers wishing to increase nurse engagement and to achieve effective management, both perceived work environment and psychological empowerment are factors that need to be well controlled in the process of nurse administration.

Authors+Show Affiliations

The Second Affiliated Hospital & College of Nursing, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China.The Second Affiliated Hospital & College of Nursing, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China.The Second Affiliated Hospital & College of Nursing, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China.The Second Affiliated Hospital & College of Nursing, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27039839

Citation

Fan, Yuying, et al. "Construction of a New Model of Job Engagement, Psychological Empowerment and Perceived Work Environment Among Chinese Registered Nurses at Four Large University Hospitals: Implications for Nurse Managers Seeking to Enhance Nursing Retention and Quality of Care." Journal of Nursing Management, vol. 24, no. 5, 2016, pp. 646-55.
Fan Y, Zheng Q, Liu S, et al. Construction of a new model of job engagement, psychological empowerment and perceived work environment among Chinese registered nurses at four large university hospitals: implications for nurse managers seeking to enhance nursing retention and quality of care. J Nurs Manag. 2016;24(5):646-55.
Fan, Y., Zheng, Q., Liu, S., & Li, Q. (2016). Construction of a new model of job engagement, psychological empowerment and perceived work environment among Chinese registered nurses at four large university hospitals: implications for nurse managers seeking to enhance nursing retention and quality of care. Journal of Nursing Management, 24(5), 646-55. https://doi.org/10.1111/jonm.12369
Fan Y, et al. Construction of a New Model of Job Engagement, Psychological Empowerment and Perceived Work Environment Among Chinese Registered Nurses at Four Large University Hospitals: Implications for Nurse Managers Seeking to Enhance Nursing Retention and Quality of Care. J Nurs Manag. 2016;24(5):646-55. PubMed PMID: 27039839.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Construction of a new model of job engagement, psychological empowerment and perceived work environment among Chinese registered nurses at four large university hospitals: implications for nurse managers seeking to enhance nursing retention and quality of care. AU - Fan,Yuying, AU - Zheng,Qiulan, AU - Liu,Shiqing, AU - Li,Qiujie, Y1 - 2016/04/04/ PY - 2016/01/18/accepted PY - 2016/4/5/entrez PY - 2016/4/5/pubmed PY - 2017/8/22/medline KW - Chinese registered nurse KW - job engagement KW - nurse manager KW - perceived nursing work environment KW - psychological empowerment KW - structural equation modelling SP - 646 EP - 55 JF - Journal of nursing management JO - J Nurs Manag VL - 24 IS - 5 N2 - AIM: To explore the relationships among perceived work environment, psychological empowerment and job engagement of clinical nurses in Harbin, China. BACKGROUND: Previous studies have focused on organisational factors or nurses' personal characteristics contributing to job engagement. Limited studies have examined the effects of perceived work environment and psychological empowerment on job engagement among Chinese nurses. METHOD: A cross-sectional quantitative survey with 923 registered nurses at four large university hospitals in China was carried out. Research instruments included the Chinese versions of the perceived nurse work environment scale, the psychological empowerment scale and the job engagement scale. The relationships of the variables were tested using structural equation modelling. RESULTS: Structural equation modelling revealed a good fit of the model, χ(2) /df = 4.46, GFI = 0.936, CFI = 0.957. Perceived work environment was a significant positive direct predictor of psychological empowerment and job engagement. Psychological empowerment was a significant positive direct contributor to job engagement and had a mediating effect on the relationship between perceived work environment and job engagement. CONCLUSIONS: Perceived work environment may result in increased job engagement by facilitating the development of psychological empowerment. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING MANAGEMENT: For nurse managers wishing to increase nurse engagement and to achieve effective management, both perceived work environment and psychological empowerment are factors that need to be well controlled in the process of nurse administration. SN - 1365-2834 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27039839/Construction_of_a_new_model_of_job_engagement_psychological_empowerment_and_perceived_work_environment_among_Chinese_registered_nurses_at_four_large_university_hospitals:_implications_for_nurse_managers_seeking_to_enhance_nursing_retention_and_quality_of_care_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -