Abstract

This study aims to investigate factors contributing to healthcare waste management practices among Libyan public hospitals. The organizational culture and structure are proposed to have their effect upon hospital organizational units in charge of healthcare waste production by a theoretical review to develop two main hypotheses. Hence, this study used the stratified random sampling technique to select respondents such as top management officials, heads of departments, and administrators who work in all the hospitals located in the south of Libya, from whom data was collected. The data for the study was gathered via a survey questionnaire from Libyan public hospitals in the country’s southern region. A total of 210 questionnaires were distributed and 171 usable responses were received, yielding a 70% response rate. Though the findings of the study show some inconsistency, the two dimensions of the culture examined in this study are found to have a positive relationship and significant influence on the management practices of health waste. Besides, it shows the positive relationship between organizational structure and healthcare waste management practices (HWMP). However, the findings of this study suggested that nurses and cleaners’ practices should critically consider structure dimensions such as formalization as well as moderating variables such as hospital location and type of services supplied on the interactions to improve the management of healthcare waste in Libya’s public hospitals.

Highlights

  • A report by the World Health Organization [1] uncovered the critical shortcomings that need immediate attention in Libyan hospitals: scaling up hygiene standards and healthcare waste collection and disposal, training of selected staff, technical support for disposal of large amounts of expired drugs and strengthening and developing medical waste management including waste segregation, collection, treatment, and disposal.The basic assumption known by various scholars is that many organizational factors affect healthcare waste management practice

  • The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence of organizational factors and culture and structure on healthcare waste management practice in Libyan public hospitals

  • The researcher opted to retain two components for further investigation [60]. This was strengthened by the parallel analysis showing the eigenvalue generated from exploratory factor analysis (EFA) stopped exceeding the random criterion value created by parallel analysis at the third component (14 variables 171 respondents) (Tables 1–3)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A report by the World Health Organization [1] uncovered the critical shortcomings that need immediate attention in Libyan hospitals: scaling up hygiene standards and healthcare waste collection and disposal, training of selected staff, technical support for disposal of large amounts of expired drugs and strengthening and developing medical waste management including waste segregation, collection, treatment, and disposal. The basic assumption known by various scholars is that many organizational factors affect healthcare waste management practice. Organizational structure is found to be a clear factor influencing healthcare waste management [2]. Some other previous research suggests that several factors will influence the management of healthcare waste [4]. It is essential to consider the influence of the system components on each other to arrive at an optimal plan for the hazardous waste

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call