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4.
Rev. psicol. trab. organ. (1999) ; 31(2): 69-77, ago. 2015. tab, ilus
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-138362

ABSTRACT

El objetivo de este estudio es examinar las relaciones entre estrés de rol, engagement y satisfacción laboral de acuerdo con el modelo demandas-recursos laborales. El modelo propuesto plantea que el engagement media la relación entre ambigüedad, conflicto y sobrecarga de rol, por un lado y satisfacción en el trabajo, por el otro. Para verificar el modelo, se obtuvieron datos de una muestra de 586 trabajadores del sur de España (Medad = 37.11, 50% mujeres). El ajuste del modelo y de la mediación se realizaron mediante un modelo de ecuaciones estructurales (path analysis). Los resultados mostraron que el conflicto de rol y la ambigüedad de rol junto con el engagement fueron predictores significativos de la satisfacción laboral. No obstante, el engagement no medió la relación entre el estrés de rol y la satisfacción laboral. El estrés de rol como demanda obstaculizadora explicaría el mayor impacto directo sobre la satisfacción que a través del engagement. Se proponen implicaciones prácticas y futuras investigaciones (AU)


The aim of this study is to examine the relationship between role stress, work engagement, and job satisfaction according to the Job Demands-Resources Model. The proposed model hypothesizes that work engagement mediates the relationship between role ambiguity, role conflict, and role overload on one hand, and job satisfaction on the other. To test the model, data was collected from 586 workers from southern Spain (Mage = 37.11, 50% women). Model fit and mediation test were examined using structural equation modeling (path analysis). Results showed that role conflict, role ambiguity, and work engagement were significant predictors of job satisfaction. However, work engagement did not mediate the relationship between role stress and job satisfaction. Role stress as a hindrance job demand would explain the most direct impact on job satisfaction than through work engagement. Implications for practice and future research are considered (AU)


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Male , Role Playing , Professional Role/psychology , Job Satisfaction , Personal Satisfaction , Psychometrics/methods , Psychometrics/trends , Conflict, Psychological , Efficiency, Organizational/history , Efficiency, Organizational/standards , Retrospective Studies , Data Analysis/methods
6.
Am Surg ; 81(1): 12-5, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25569045

ABSTRACT

Ernest Amory Codman had an early penchant fondness for recording surgical complications and analyzing these recordings to determine a surgeon's ability along with a hospital's efficiency. This idea and the actions that followed suit in his career were not well received by his fellow colleagues. However, Codman's influence and spirit remained and helped shape important institutions in American medicine such as the The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.


Subject(s)
Efficiency, Organizational/history , General Surgery/history , Hospitals, General/history , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hospitals, General/standards , Humans , Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations/history , Male , Organizational Innovation , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care/methods , United States
8.
J Appl Psychol ; 99(3): 361-89, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24377393

ABSTRACT

This study integrates research from strategy, economics, and applied psychology to examine how organizations may leverage their human resources to enhance firm performance and competitive advantage. Staffing and training are key human resource management practices used to achieve firm performance through acquiring and developing human capital resources. However, little research has examined whether and why staffing and training influence firm-level financial performance (profit) growth under different environmental (economic) conditions. Using 359 firms with over 12 years of longitudinal firm-level profit data, we suggest that selective staffing and internal training directly and interactively influence firm profit growth through their effects on firm labor productivity, implying that staffing and training contribute to the generation of slack resources that help buffer and then recover from the effects of the Great Recession. Further, internal training that creates specific human capital resources is more beneficial for prerecession profitability, but staffing is more beneficial for postrecession recovery, apparently because staffing creates generic human capital resources that enable firm flexibility and adaptation. Thus, the theory and findings presented in this article have implications for the way staffing and training may be used strategically to weather economic uncertainty (recession effects). They also have important practical implications by demonstrating that firms that more effectively staff and train will outperform competitors throughout all pre- and postrecessionary periods, even after controlling for prior profitability.


Subject(s)
Economic Recession , Efficiency, Organizational/standards , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling/standards , Staff Development/standards , Adult , Economic Recession/history , Efficiency, Organizational/economics , Efficiency, Organizational/history , History, 21st Century , Humans , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling/economics , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling/history , Staff Development/economics , Staff Development/history
10.
Clin Orthop Relat Res ; 471(6): 1778-83, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23381621

ABSTRACT

This is an abridged version of the Classic Article by E.A. Codman, A Study in Hospital Efficiency: As Demonstrated by the Case Report of the First Five Years of a Private Hospital. The full article is available as supplemental material for the abridged version in the online version of CORR®. An accompanying biographical sketch of E.A. Codman is available at DOI 10.1007/s11999-012-2750-4 . The Classic Article is © 1918 and is reprinted courtesy of Thomas Todd Co. from E.A. Codman. A Study in Hospital Efficiency: As Demonstrated by the Case Report of the First Five Years of a Private Hospital. Boston: Thomas Todd Co.; 1918: 4-10,108,162.


Subject(s)
Efficiency, Organizational/history , Hospitalization , Hospitals, Private/history , Boston , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hospitals, Private/organization & administration , Orthopedics/history
11.
Clin Orthop Relat Res ; 471(6): 1775-7, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23247819

ABSTRACT

This biographical sketch on E.A. Codman corresponds to the historic text, The Classic: A Study in Hospital Efficiency: As Demonstrated by the Case Report of the First Five Years of a Private Hospital (1918), available at DOI 10.1007/s11999-012-2751-3.


Subject(s)
Efficiency, Organizational/history , Hospitalization , Hospitals, Private/history
14.
Nurs Hist Rev ; 20: 136-61, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22360001

ABSTRACT

Oral history methodology was used to investigate the perspectives of retired British district nurses and Australian domiciliary nurses who had practiced between 1960 and 2000. Interviews yielded insights into the dramatic changes in community nursing practice during the last four decades of the 20th century. Massive changes in health care and government-led drives for greater efficiency meant moving from practice governed by "experiential time" (in which perception of time depends on the quality of experience) to practice governed by "measured time" (in which experience itself is molded by the measurement of time). Nurses recognized that the quality of their working lives and their relationships with families had been altered by the social, cultural, and political changes, including the drive for professional recognition in nursing itself, soaring economic costs of health care and push for deinstitutionalization of care. Community nurses faced several dilemmas as they grappled with the demands for efficiency created by these changes.


Subject(s)
Community Health Nursing/history , Efficiency, Organizational/history , Health Care Reform/history , Practice Patterns, Nurses'/history , Social Change/history , Attitude of Health Personnel , Community Health Nursing/organization & administration , England , Female , Health Care Reform/organization & administration , History, 20th Century , Humans , Narration , Nurse's Role/history , Organizational Innovation , Queensland
15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21999006

ABSTRACT

Spain was officially represented at the preliminary international conference the "International Committee for the Assistance to Sick and Wounded Soldiers" (better known as the "Geneva Committee") organised at Geneva in October 1863; and joined the Red Cross one year later on the occasion of the first Geneva Convention in August 1864. This article explores the ambivalence between the humanitarian ethos and the military efficiency in the early Spanish Red Cross through the works of Nicasio Landa (1830-1891). A medical major of the Spanish Military Health Service, the co-founder of the Spanish section of the Red Cross in 1864, and its general inspector in 1867, Landa was its most active promoter, and responsible for its connections with the Geneva Committee and other national sections of this international association during its early times. He was not only an active correspondent, but also a prolific author of monographs, leaflets and articles in specialized and daily newspapers on humanitarianism and war medicine, in addition to being the founder of the Spanish Red Cross journal La Caridad en la Guerra in 1870.


Subject(s)
Altruism , Efficiency, Organizational/history , Ethics/history , International Cooperation , Literature, Modern/history , Medicine in Literature , Military Medicine/history , Red Cross/history , Warfare , Wounds and Injuries/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Spain
18.
São Paulo; Artemeios; 2007. 113 p. ilus.
Monography in Portuguese | Sec. Munic. Saúde SP, COVISA-Acervo | ID: sms-6398
19.
São Paulo; Artemeios; 2007. 113 p. ilus.
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS, COVISA-Acervo | ID: lil-681172
20.
Nurse Educ Today ; 26(8): 634-9, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17028076

ABSTRACT

This paper is an amended and abridged version of a seminar given at the NET/NEP 1st Nurse Education International Conference in Vancouver, Canada. The topic of the paper arose from our growing concerns about the state of nurse education and its position in the university at the start of the twenty-first century. We share the fears expressed by Readings that the university has lost its way and is increasingly driven by a business agenda and a quest for ever-greater efficiency. Our biggest concern is with the impact that the so-called 'posthistorical university' is having on the study of nursing, particularly the growing pressure on nurse academics to focus their attention and energy on output at the expense of process, and on research at the expense of practice and practitioner development. We suggest that the solution might lie with Jean-Francois Lyotard's notion of postmodern philosophy as a way of opening up debate and, in his words, saving the honour of thinking.


Subject(s)
Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/history , Faculty, Nursing/history , Philosophy, Nursing/history , Postmodernism/history , Universities/history , Efficiency, Organizational/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Knowledge , Models, Educational , Narration/history , Organizational Objectives , Professional Competence , Science/history , Technology Assessment, Biomedical/history
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