Bullying Among Hospital Staff : Use of Psychometric Triage to Identify Intervention Priorities
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/3804Date
2011Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Survey of workplace bullying in a Norwegian
hospital found that 10% of nurses, therapists, and
physicians (N=440) had witnessed bullying. Negative Acts Questionnaire (NAQ) scores were low,
Minnesota Satisfaction Questionnaire (MSQ) scores
were positive, and Organizational Commitment
Questionnaire (OCQ) scores were neutral. NAQ
scores and having witnessed bullying both predicted low MSQ scores, low over-all job satisfaction, and low OCQ scores. By psychometric triage, some of the NAQ’s 22 negative acts can be identified for priority administrative intervention based on a) the degree to which NAQ items predict decreased satisfaction and decreased commitment, b) the prevalence rates of
particular negative acts, and c) efficiency of
intervention. Psychometric triage recommended
intervention first on the problem of “necessary
information withheld”, which had an 18% prevalence
rate and predicted lower MSQ and OCQ scores. The
second priority should be on “pressure to give up
entitlements”, which had prevalence of 2% but also
predicted lower MSQ and OCQ scores. The third and
fourth priorities should focus on “tasks below level of competence” (reported by 51%) and on
“unmanageable workload” (reported by 28%), neither
of which predicted MSQ or OCQ scores.
Publisher
Faculty of Life & Social Sciences, Swinburne University of TechnologyCitation
E-Journal of Applied Psychology 17(2011) nr. 2 s. 26-31Metadata
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