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The influence of supportive work environment on work‐related stress and conflict management style among emergency care nurses: A descriptive correlational study

Sally Mohammed Farghaly Abdelaliem, Haitham Mokhtar Mohamed Abdallah, Mohamed Ezzelregal Abdelgawad, Ahmed Abdelwahab Ibrahim El‐Sayed

2024Worldviews on Evidence-Based Nursing12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Stress and conflict in emergency departments are inevitable but can be managed. A supportive work environment is key to helping emergency care providers, especially nurses, constructively manage work-related stress and conflict. AIM: The aim of this study was to assess the influence of supportive work environments on work-related stress and conflict management style among emergency care nurses. METHODS: A descriptive correlational research design was utilized. Data were collected from 221 staff nurses recruited from two university hospital emergency departments in Alexandria, Egypt. Three instruments were used: (1) perceived organizational support scale, (2) nurses' occupational stressors scale, and (3) conflict management style inventory. RESULTS: There was a highly significant correlation between supportive work environments and work-related stress (p = .000) and a significant correlation between supportive work environments and conflict management style (p = .026). Supportive work environments had a significant inverse negative relationship with work-related stress experienced by nurses (p = .001) and accounted for 51% of variance in work-related stress. Meanwhile, supportive work environments had a significant positive relationship with conflict management styles of nurses (p = .026). Work-related stress had a significant relationship with nurses' conflict management style (p = .000) and accounted for 45% of the variance in conflict management style. LINKING EVIDENCE TO ACTION: The style of conflict management modeled by staff within emergency departments can positively or negatively influence the work environment and level of work-related stress. There is a necessity to cultivate a supportive culture for nurses in emergency departments to develop skills for constructive conflict management styles to reduce work-related stress.

Topics & Concepts

Work (physics)PsychologyDescriptive researchStyle (visual arts)Work stressNursingDescriptive statisticsManagement stylesStress managementWork environmentApplied psychologySocial psychologyMedicineClinical psychologyJob satisfactionSociologyPublic relationsPolitical scienceEngineeringGeographySocial scienceMechanical engineeringMathematicsStatisticsArchaeologyHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutWorkplace Violence and BullyingConflict Management and Negotiation
The influence of supportive work environment on work‐related stress and conflict management style among emergency care nurses: A descriptive correlational study | Litcius