Association between moral distress and job satisfaction of Japanese psychiatric nurses
Moral distress of psychiatric nurses may affect their job satisfaction or quality of nursing care, thus examination of their moral distress is a significant issue for practice. The purpose of this study was to investigate the level of moral distress and job satisfaction, and association between mora...
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University of Hawaii Press
2016-08-01
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doaj-99dcf80844474d1ba5e1fe8c69946f8e2020-11-24T20:43:31ZengUniversity of Hawaii PressAsian/Pacific Island Nursing Journal2373-66582016-08-0112556010.9741/23736658.1020Association between moral distress and job satisfaction of Japanese psychiatric nursesMichiyo Ando0Masashi Kawano1Saint Mary’s College, Kurume City, Fukuoka, JapanArima Kogen Hospital, JapanMoral distress of psychiatric nurses may affect their job satisfaction or quality of nursing care, thus examination of their moral distress is a significant issue for practice. The purpose of this study was to investigate the level of moral distress and job satisfaction, and association between moral distress and job satisfaction. One hundred and thirty nurses who worked in psychiatric wards in a hospital in Japan completed the Moral Distress Scale for psychiatric nurses (MDS-P) and the Job Satisfaction scale (JS). The MDS-P consisted of subdomains such as “unethical conduct by caregivers,” “low staffing,” and “acquiescence to violations of patients’ rights” in intensity and frequency; the JS consisted of seven subcategories. An institutional review board in the researcher’s college approved this study. Results showed that the “acquiescence to violations of patients’ rights” was the highest of the subdomains of MDS-P, and the “interactions among nurses” was the highest of the subdomains of the JS. The unethical conduct by caregivers (MDS-P) score was negatively correlated with administration (JS) for intensity (r = -.40, p < .001) and frequency (r = .37, p < .001). Moreover “acquiescence to violations of patients’ rights (MDS-P)” was also negatively correlated with the “task requirement (JS)” score for intensity (r = -0.49, p < .001) and for frequency (r = -0.50, p < .001). These results suggest that reduction of moral distress increases job satisfaction particularly for administration and task requirement in nursing care.http://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/apin/vol1/iss2/11/Japanjob satisfactionmoral distresspsychiatric nurse |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Michiyo Ando Masashi Kawano |
spellingShingle |
Michiyo Ando Masashi Kawano Association between moral distress and job satisfaction of Japanese psychiatric nurses Asian/Pacific Island Nursing Journal Japan job satisfaction moral distress psychiatric nurse |
author_facet |
Michiyo Ando Masashi Kawano |
author_sort |
Michiyo Ando |
title |
Association between moral distress and job satisfaction of Japanese psychiatric nurses |
title_short |
Association between moral distress and job satisfaction of Japanese psychiatric nurses |
title_full |
Association between moral distress and job satisfaction of Japanese psychiatric nurses |
title_fullStr |
Association between moral distress and job satisfaction of Japanese psychiatric nurses |
title_full_unstemmed |
Association between moral distress and job satisfaction of Japanese psychiatric nurses |
title_sort |
association between moral distress and job satisfaction of japanese psychiatric nurses |
publisher |
University of Hawaii Press |
series |
Asian/Pacific Island Nursing Journal |
issn |
2373-6658 |
publishDate |
2016-08-01 |
description |
Moral distress of psychiatric nurses may affect their job satisfaction or quality of nursing care, thus examination of their moral distress is a significant issue for practice. The purpose of this study was to investigate the level of moral distress and job satisfaction, and association between moral distress and job satisfaction. One hundred and thirty nurses who worked in psychiatric wards in a hospital in Japan completed the Moral Distress Scale for psychiatric nurses (MDS-P) and the Job Satisfaction scale (JS). The MDS-P consisted of subdomains such as “unethical conduct by caregivers,” “low staffing,” and “acquiescence to violations of patients’ rights” in intensity and frequency; the JS consisted of seven subcategories. An institutional review board in the researcher’s college approved this study. Results showed that the “acquiescence to violations of patients’ rights” was the highest of the subdomains of MDS-P, and the “interactions among nurses” was the highest of the subdomains of the JS. The unethical conduct by caregivers (MDS-P) score was negatively correlated with administration (JS) for intensity (r = -.40, p < .001) and frequency (r = .37, p < .001). Moreover “acquiescence to violations of patients’ rights (MDS-P)” was also negatively correlated with the “task requirement (JS)” score for intensity (r = -0.49, p < .001) and for frequency (r = -0.50, p < .001). These results suggest that reduction of moral distress increases job satisfaction particularly for administration and task requirement in nursing care. |
topic |
Japan job satisfaction moral distress psychiatric nurse |
url |
http://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/apin/vol1/iss2/11/ |
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AT michiyoando associationbetweenmoraldistressandjobsatisfactionofjapanesepsychiatricnurses AT masashikawano associationbetweenmoraldistressandjobsatisfactionofjapanesepsychiatricnurses |
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