Litcius/Paper detail

Risk and Protective Factors of Well-Being among Healthcare Staff. A Thematic Analysis

Sabrina Berlanda, Federica De Cordova, Marta Fraizzoli, Monica Pedrazza

2020International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to identify physical and psychosocial working conditions to improve well-being at work among healthcare staff. This is a potent area of inquiry given the relationship between healthcare staff well-being and service quality and other key organizational characteristics. However, while numerous studies in this area have used a quantitative methodology, very few have applied qualitative methodologies gathering subjective descriptions of the sources of well-being, providing in so doing significant data to explore in depth the factors that influence well-being in healthcare systems. We gathered qualitative data analyzing open-ended questions about risk and protective factors of well-being at work. The sample was made of 795 professionals answering an online questionnaire. Answers were coded and analyzed using the thematic analysis with an inductive approach (data-driven). We identified four themes strongly affecting professional well-being in health-care staff: Interactions, Working Conditions, Emotional Responses to Work, and Competence and Professional Growth. Our findings suggest possible strategies and actions that may be effective in helping to calibrate case-specific support and monitoring interventions to improve health and well-being of healthcare staff. We also discuss the implications of the study and suggest possible avenues for future empirical research.

Topics & Concepts

Thematic analysisHealth carePsychosocialPsychologyCompetence (human resources)Psychological interventionQualitative propertyQualitative researchApplied psychologySample (material)Work (physics)NursingKnowledge managementMedicineSocial psychologyComputer scienceSociologyEngineeringChromatographyEconomicsMachine learningEconomic growthPsychiatryChemistryMechanical engineeringSocial scienceHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutWorkplace Health and Well-beingHealth, psychology, and well-being