Publication | Closed Access
Healthcare Reform and the Workplace Experience of Nurses: Implications for Patient Care and Union Organizing
44
Citations
20
References
2001
Year
Health AdministrationHuman Resource ManagementHealth Care ManagementUnited StatesOrganizational BehaviorIndustrial RelationPrimary CareManagementCollective BargainingDeteriorating ClimateWorkplace ExperiencePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchWay HealthcareUnion OrganizingNursingOrganizational CommunicationWorkforce DevelopmentHealthcare ReformHospital EnvironmentBusinessNursing Research
The introduction of market-based reforms over the past twenty-five years has fundamentally changed the way healthcare is delivered in the United States. This paper reports the results of a survey of the workplace experiences and attitudes of hospital-based registered nurses under healthcare reform. The authors find that nurses who had experienced reform-related job restructuring held substantially more negative views of the climate for patient care than nurses who had not experienced restructuring. Also, nurses who had experienced reform-related mergers held more negative perceptions of the climate for patient care than those who had not been through a merger, although the relationship was less strong than it was for restructuring. Nurses concerned about a deteriorating climate for patient care indicated a desire for greater voice in the organization and staffing of hospitals and also indicated a greater readiness than other nurses to vote for a union.
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