Abstract

Nurses are vulnerable to mental health challenges, including burnout, as they are exposed to adverse job conditions such as high workload. The mental health of this population can relate not only to individual well-being but also to patient safety outcomes. Therefore, there is a need for a mental health improvement strategy that targets this population. This cross-sectional survey study investigates emotional labor, burnout, turnover intention, and medical error levels among 117 nursing staff members in a South Korean university hospital; it also analyzes correlations among outcomes and conduct correlation analysis and multiple regression analysis to determine relationships among these factors. The participants had moderate to high levels of emotional labor and burnout, and 23% had experienced medical errors within the last six months. Save for medical errors, all outcomes significantly and positively correlated with each other. These results can be used to improve the mental health outcomes of nurses working in the hospital and their consequences. Specifically, the job positions of nursing personnel may be a major consideration in such a strategy, and job-focused emotional labor and employee-focused emotional labor may be promising targets in ameliorating turnover intention and client-related burnout, respectively.

Highlights

  • Nurses are healthcare professionals who are vulnerable to various mental health challenges, including burnout, as they are exposed to adverse job characteristics such as high workload, relatively low staffing levels, and long shifts [1]

  • Unfavorable mental health conditions among nurses can relate to high turnover intention; South Korean nurses are being constantly challenged with high turnover rates, and there is a need to improve what are poor working environments [3]

  • Being a staff nurse was associated with higher levels of work-related burnout and client-related burnout than being a charge nurse, and being a charge nurse was associated with higher levels of job-focused emotional labor

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Summary

Introduction

Nurses are healthcare professionals who are vulnerable to various mental health challenges, including burnout, as they are exposed to adverse job characteristics such as high workload, relatively low staffing levels, and long shifts [1]. Since the mental health of healthcare professionals, including nurses, can relate to well-being at the individual level and to patient safety outcomes (i.e., through medical errors and the like), there is a need to focus on the mental health of this population [2]. Unfavorable mental health conditions among nurses can relate to high turnover intention; South Korean nurses are being constantly challenged with high turnover rates, and there is a need to improve what are poor working environments [3].

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