Publication | Closed Access
The Impact of Workplace Empowerment, Organizational Trust on Staff Nurses' Work Satisfaction and Organizational Commitment
612
Citations
50
References
2001
Year
Healthy Work EnvironmentWork OrganizationHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorNonexperimental DesignEmployee AttitudeWorkplace EmpowermentWork Empowerment TheoryManagementWork AttitudePatient EmpowermentOrganizational CommitmentWork SatisfactionNursingEmployee InvolvementPerformance StudiesWork EnvironmentsOrganizational CommunicationWorkforce DevelopmentBusinessEmployee EngagementArtsOrganizational Trust
A predictive, nonexperimental design was used to test Kanter's work empowerment theory in a random sample of 412 staff nurses selected from the professional registry list of a central Canadian province. Kanter argues that work environments that provide access to information, support, resources, and opportunity to learn and develop are empowering and influence employee work attitudes, productivity, and organizational effectiveness. Test results suggest that fostering environments that enhance perceptions of empowerment will have positive effects on organizational members and increase organizational effectiveness.
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