The relationship between perceived management commitment to safety, psychological empowerment, and safety performance among emergency nurses in Jordan

•A significant association was found between management commitment to safety, psychological empowerment, and safety performance.•Management commitment to safety and psychological empowerment were predictors of safety performance.•Emergency nurses should be psychologically empowered and the value of...

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Veröffentlicht in:International emergency nursing 2023-09, Vol.70, p.101343, Article 101343
Hauptverfasser: Allowh, Sondos N., Malak, Malakeh Z., Alnawafleh, Ahmad H., Ta'Amnha, Mohammad
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A significant association was found between management commitment to safety, psychological empowerment, and safety performance.•Management commitment to safety and psychological empowerment were predictors of safety performance.•Emergency nurses should be psychologically empowered and the value of management commitment to safety is needed for effective safety performance. Nurses are susceptible to unfavorable effects of workplace accidents and injuries, therefore, perceived management commitment to safety and psychological empowerment can help nurses to participate in safety measures and adhere to safety performance. Thus, this study aimed to examine the relationship between perceived management commitment to safety, psychological empowerment, and safety performance among emergency nurses in Jordan. A cross-sectional, descriptive correlational design was used and 306 registered nurses working in the emergency department in Jordanian governmental hospitals were recruited. A self-structured questionnaire consisting of the perceived management commitment to safety scale, psychological empowerment scale, and safety performance scale was used to collect data during the period from July 2022 to August 2022. The findings demonstrated that the levels of study variables revealed as follows: the perceived management commitment to safety mean was 3.1 (SD = 0.66) out of 5, which indicated an acceptable level, the mean score of psychological empowerment was 5.37 (SD = 0.94) out of 7, which reflected that the nurses perceived the work environment to be psychologically empowered, and the mean score for safety performance was 4.02 (SD = 0.56) out of 5, which indicated an acceptable level of safety performance among the participants, and the mean for subscales (safety compliance and participation) was 4.07 (SD = 0.57) and 3.93 (SD = 0.69) out of 5, respectively. Also, there was a positive correlation between safety performance and perceived management commitment to safety (r = 0.334, p 
ISSN:1755-599X
1532-9267
DOI:10.1016/j.ienj.2023.101343