Effects of a person‐centred and thriving‐promoting intervention on nursing home staff job satisfaction: A multi‐centre, non‐equivalent controlled before-after study

Abstract Aim To evaluate the effects of a person‐centred and thriving‐promoting intervention in nursing homes on staff job satisfaction, stress of conscience and the person‐centredness of care and of the environment. Design A multi‐centre, non‐equivalent control group, before-after trial design. Met...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tove Karin Vassbø (Author), Ådel Bergland (Author), Marit Kirkevold (Author), Marie Lindkvist (Author), Qarin Lood (Author), Per‐Olof Sandman (Author), Karin Sjögren (Author), David Edvardsson (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Wiley, 2020-11-01T00:00:00Z.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this object online.
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Abstract Aim To evaluate the effects of a person‐centred and thriving‐promoting intervention in nursing homes on staff job satisfaction, stress of conscience and the person‐centredness of care and of the environment. Design A multi‐centre, non‐equivalent control group, before-after trial design. Methods Staff (N = 341) from six nursing homes in Australia, Norway and Sweden were assigned to the intervention or the control group and both groups were evaluated before the intervention, immediately after and by 6 months follow‐up. Staff completed a questionnaire about job satisfaction (primary endpoint), stress of conscience and the person‐centredness of care and of the environment (secondary endpoints). Linear regression models were used to identify the mean scores and to analyse group differences to test the effects of the intervention. Results The intervention had no statistically significant effects on staff job satisfaction, level of stress of conscience or the perceived person‐centredness of care and of the environment.
Item Description:2054-1058
10.1002/nop2.565