Title of article :
The relationship between leadership, teamworking, structure,
burnout and attitude to patients on acute psychiatric wards
Author/Authors :
Len Bowers، نويسنده , , Henk Nijman، نويسنده , , Alan Simpson، نويسنده , , Julia Jones، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
Background Conflict (aggression, substance use,
absconding, etc.) and containment (coerced medication,
manual restraint, etc.) threaten the safety of patients and
staff on psychiatric wards. Previous work has suggested
that staff variables may be significant in explaining differences
between wards in their rates of these behaviours,
and that structure (ward organisation, rules and daily routines)
might be the most critical of these. This paper
describes the exploration of a large dataset to assess the
relationship between structure and other staff variables.
Methods A multivariate cross-sectional design was utilised.
Data were collected from staff on 136 acute psychiatric
wards in 26 NHS Trusts in England, measuring
leadership, teamwork, structure, burnout and attitudes
towards difficult patients. Relationships between these
variables were explored through principal components
analysis (PCA), structural equation modelling and cluster
analysis.
Results Principal components analysis resulted in the
identification of each questionnaire as a separate factor,
indicating that the selected instruments assessed a number
of non-overlapping items relevant for ward functioning.
Structural equation modelling suggested a linear model in
which leadership influenced teamwork, teamwork structure;
structure burnout; and burnout feelings about difficult
patients. Finally, cluster analysis identified two significantly
distinct groups of wards: the larger of which had
particularly good leadership, teamwork, structure, attitudes
towards patients and low burnout; and the second smaller
proportion which was poor on all variables and high on
burnout. The better functioning cluster of wards had significantly
lower rates of containment events.
Conclusion The overall performance of staff teams is
associated with differing rates of containment on wards.
Interventions to reduce rates of containment on wards may
need to address staff issues at every level, from leadership
through to staff attitudes.
Keywords :
Inpatients Staff Leadership Teamwork Burnout
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)