2015
DOI: 10.1590/0104-070720150000110014
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The Professional Satisfaction of the Nursing Team vs. Work Conditions and Relations: A Relational Study

Abstract: This relational, transversal and quantitative study aimed to test the association of sociodemographic and professional variables with the job satisfaction of hospital nursing teams and to ascertain whether the work relations and conditions influenced the professional satisfaction of the same teams. A total of 212 subjects participated, responding to the Research into Work Conditions and Relations questionnaire in the period February -June 2013. The data were treated using descriptive statistical analysis and b… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…A predominance of female sex and married or stable union was observed, as reported in other studies (8)(9)(10) , this marital status is considered to have less emotional drain which increases the probability of satisfaction (1) . It was noted that the nurses in this study were more specialized than the current Brazilian population and that in the category of technical level these employees had a high educational level (8) .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 64%
“…A predominance of female sex and married or stable union was observed, as reported in other studies (8)(9)(10) , this marital status is considered to have less emotional drain which increases the probability of satisfaction (1) . It was noted that the nurses in this study were more specialized than the current Brazilian population and that in the category of technical level these employees had a high educational level (8) .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 64%
“…Focusing on cost reduction, economic effectiveness and productivity, nurses' salaries are reduced while there is increasing clinical pressure, shifting, scarcity, workload, stress, and insecurity at work (European Federation of Nurses Associations (EFN) ; Burke, Ng, & Wolpin, ; Correia, Dussault, & Pontes, ; DeToyer & Verdoot, ; Granero‐Lázaro, Blanch‐Ribas, Roldán‐Merino, Torralbas‐Ortega, & Escayola‐Maranges, ). These factors, considered by some authors as aspects from neoliberal models (Souza & Mendes, ), have been related to worsened nurses' health conditions and increased burn‐out, stress, and vulnerability (de Gonçalves, Pessanha Leite, Souza, & dos Santos, ; de Gonçalves, Souza, Zeitoune, Adame, & Nascimento, ; Llop‐Gironés, Tarafa, & Benach, ; Wisniewski, Silva, Évora, & Matsuda, ).…”
Section: Discussion Of Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the variable MHO, the military personnel that worked in the capital of the Rio Grande do Sul State, in the Military Hospital of Area, presented a prevalence 20% higher than those who worked in the countryside. This finding may be associated with some peculiarities, such as the technical complexity of the nursing practice in large hospitals and the metropolitan stress, driven mainly by high cost of living, concern with health, safety, education and, similarly, by the effects of heavy traffic (13)(14)(15)(16) .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%