학술논문

The nurse without a nurse: the antecedents of presenteeism in nursing.
Document Type
Article
Source
BMC Nursing. 8/13/2021, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p1-11. 11p. 3 Charts.
Subject
*PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout
*PRESENTEEISM (Labor)
*LABOR productivity
*PROFESSIONS
*NURSES' attitudes
*RESEARCH methodology
*JOB stress
*INTERVIEWING
*SOCIAL justice
*PEER relations
*HEALTH status indicators
*MENTAL health
*HUMAN multitasking
*QUALITATIVE research
*HOSPITAL nursing staff
*HOSPITAL wards
*PROFESSIONAL identity
*COMMUNICATION
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*RESEARCH funding
*CONTENT analysis
*INDUSTRIAL hygiene
*JUDGMENT sampling
*DATA analysis software
*POWER (Social sciences)
Language
ISSN
1472-6955
Abstract
Background: Presenteeism describes the state in which staff who lack the conditions for being present at work and need rest and leave for various reasons (such as illness, low spirits, fatigue, etc.) are present at the workplace. Due to the lack of knowledge about the antecedents of presenteeism in nurses and the context-based nature of this concept, the present study was conducted to explain the reasons for presenteeism in nurses. Methods: This qualitative study was performed using the qualitative content analysis method. The study population consisted of 17 nurses working in different wards of hospitals. In this regard, data were collected from February to June 2020 using individual, face-to-face, in-depth, semi-structured interviews and were analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Results: The nurse without a nurse was a category introduced as an antecedent of presenteeism. In this respect, nurses experienced limited power, injustice, compulsory presence, inadequate structural facilities, damaged professional identity, manager-nurse disconnect, insufficient knowledge, physical and mental health complications, job stress, job burnout, multitasking, and impaired communication. Conclusion: The nurse, who has been responsible for caring, supporting, advising, advocating, and educating the patient, has now been left without a nurse. In other words, not nursing the nurse has given rise to the emergence of presenteeism. It is recommended that the results of this study be used in making health policies. The results of this study can make nurses' voices heard by health leaders and managers. A voice that has never been heard as it deserves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]