Hospital Restructuring Stressors, Support, and Nursing Staff Perceptions of Unit Functioning

Hospital restructuring and downsizing have taken place in most developed countries during the past 10 years. A small but growing body of research findings has identified aspects of these changes that serve as sources of stress for nursing staff during these transitions as well as organizational initiatives that facilitate those transitions. This study reports results from a longitudinal study of hospital restructuring and downsizing on nursing staff perceptions of hospital functioning. Data were collected in November 1996 and again in November 1999 from hospital-based nursing staff using questionnaires. The findings showed moderate but statistically significant relationships between restructuring stressors and organizational support in 1996 and perceptions of hospital functioning in 1999. Nursing staff reporting higher levels of restructuring stressors and lower hospital support in 1996 indicated more negative perceptions of unit and hospital functioning in 1999.

[1]  K. Rondeau,et al.  Managing the consequences of hospital cutbacks: the role of workforce reduction practices. , 2001, Journal of health and human services administration.

[2]  Wayne F. Cascio Learning from Outcomes: Financial experiences of 300 Firms that have Downsized , 1998 .

[3]  P. Folcarelli,et al.  The effects of health care reforms on job satisfaction and voluntary turnover among hospital-based nurses. , 1997, Medical care.

[4]  M. Armstrong-Stassen,et al.  The impact of organizational downsizing on the job satisfaction of nurses. , 1996, Canadian journal of nursing administration.

[5]  Katharina Balazs,et al.  The Downside of Downsizing , 1997 .

[6]  David M. Noer,et al.  Healing the Wounds: Overcoming the Trauma of Layoffs and Revitalizing Downsized Organizations , 1993 .

[7]  L. Aiken,et al.  Hospital restructuring in the United States, Canada, and Western Europe: an outcomes research agenda. , 1997, Medical care.

[8]  K. L. White Hospital restructuring in North America and Europe. , 1997, Medical care.

[9]  Wayne F. Cascio,et al.  Whither industrial and organizational psychology in a changing world of work , 1995 .

[10]  H S Shannon,et al.  The impact of re-engineering and other cost reduction strategies on the staff of a large teaching hospital: a longitudinal study. , 1999, Medical care.

[11]  D. Baker,et al.  Understanding changes in health status. Is the floor phenomenon merely the last step of the staircase? , 1997, Medical care.

[12]  Ronald J. Burke,et al.  Workload and burnout in nurses , 2001 .

[13]  James Campbell Quick,et al.  The new organizational reality: Downsizing, restructuring, and revitalization. , 1998 .

[14]  Wayne F. Cascio,et al.  Downsizing: What do we know? What have we learned? , 1993 .

[15]  Floyd C. Mann,et al.  The community general hospital , 1963 .

[16]  R. Burke,et al.  Hospital restructuring and nursing staff well-being: The role of perceived hospital and union support , 2001 .

[17]  L. Aiken,et al.  Evaluating the consequences of hospital restructuring. , 1997, Medical care.

[18]  David A. Whetten,et al.  Organizational Effects of Decline and Turbulence. , 1987 .

[19]  Robert L. Brannon Restructuring Hospital Nursing: Reversing the Trend toward a Professional Work Force , 1996, International journal of health services : planning, administration, evaluation.

[20]  L. Aiken,et al.  Downsizing the hospital nursing workforce. , 1996, Health affairs.

[21]  Ronald J. Burke,et al.  Downsizing and restructuring: lessons from the firing line for revitalizing organizations , 1997 .