Article
Nursing
Bin Wang, Guiyuan Zou, Mei Zheng, Chen Chen, Weiyu Teng, Qinghua Lu
Summary: This study investigated the quality of handovers among psychiatric nurses and found that job satisfaction and group cohesion could predict handover quality. Job satisfaction partially mediated the relationship between group cohesion and handover quality.
Article
Medicine, General & Internal
Somayah Mohsen Mohammed Al-Qarni, Hala Mohamed Mohamed Bayoumy, Dalyal Alosaimi
Summary: This research evaluated nurses' perceptions of postoperative handover quality and identified factors impacting this process. The results revealed that overall, nurses perceived the postoperative handover quality to be high. The findings of this study provide valuable insights for future improvements in handover practices to ensure high-quality patient care.
CUREUS JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCE
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Cornelia Mairean, Loredana R. Diaconu-Gherasim
Summary: The present study aims to assess the relationship between time perspective and risky driving behaviors. The findings indicate that individuals with higher levels of past negative and present fatalistic time perspectives are more likely to engage in risky driving behaviors, while those with higher levels of future time perspective are less likely to engage in risky driving behaviors. Moreover, risk perception mediates the relationship between time perspective and risky driving behavior.
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Nursing
Ebtsam Aly Abou Hashish, Atheer Ahmed Asiri, Yara Khaled Alnajjar
Summary: This study investigated the quality of handover among nurses in Saudi Arabia and identified contributing factors. The findings revealed that staffing, cognitive capacity, focus of attention, relationships, and safety climate positively affected handover quality, while intrusions, distractions, anxiety, time stress, and fatigue had negative effects. The study recommends creating a supportive environment, providing better training, and implementing standardized handover protocols to improve communication and handover quality.
Review
Business
Umair Akram, Rambabu Lavuri
Summary: This research examines the relationship between webrooming intention and its influencing factors by collecting data from Indian luxury shoppers. The results show that consumer traits and channel-related factors have a positive impact on shoppers' webrooming intention. Perceived values mediate the relationship between channel and consumer traits factors and webrooming intention. Furthermore, online perceived risk and reviews moderate the relationship between perceived value and webrooming intention.
JOURNAL OF CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
(2023)
Article
Engineering, Industrial
Valerie O'Keeffe, Carolyn Boyd, Craig Phillips, Michelle Oppert
Summary: Student nurses are more likely to seek help and wait when managing high-risk patient aggression scenarios, placing the utmost importance on their own safety and the patient's condition in decision-making. Gender also plays a significant role in how student nurses interact with resource risk, with male nurses more likely to seek help when risks are high.
APPLIED ERGONOMICS
(2021)
Article
Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
Yung-Jaan Lee, Shih-Ying Lin
Summary: This study examines the relationships among climate change perception, flood risk perception, place attachment, and coping behavior in Taipei, Taiwan. The results indicate that place satisfaction mediates the relationship between attitudes and high-effort coping behavior, and there are partial mediating effects through place dependence, place identity, and place social bonding. The study contributes to the understanding of the effects of place attachment on flood risk perception and coping behavior.
Article
Psychology
Wenhao Dai, Tianshu Yang, Benjamin X. White, Ryan Palmer, Emily K. Sanders, Jack A. McDonald, Melody Leung, Dolores Albarracin
Summary: This study conducted a meta-analysis of 351 studies and found that there was no difference in the effects of priming behavioral and nonbehavioral concepts, suggesting that associative processes explain the effects of both types of primes.
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN
(2023)
Article
Nursing
Xiucheng Ma, Dongmei Wu, Xiaofeng Hou
Summary: This research explores the role of job satisfaction as a mediator between positive affect and job performance, with the moderating effect of work seniority among psychiatric nurses. The results show that positive affect is positively connected to job performance and job satisfaction. Job satisfaction partially mediates the relationship between positive affect and job performance, and this mediation is moderated by work seniority.
Article
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Faith Rickard, Fides Lu, Lotta Gustafsson, Christine MacArthur, Carole Cummins, Ivan Coker, Amie Wilson, Kebba Mane, Kebba Manneh, Semira Manaseki-Holland
Summary: This study investigated maternity handover in all three maternity hospitals in Banjul, The Gambia and found inconsistencies and various barriers in the handover process. Shift-leads were responsible for handover, which were often delayed, lacked confidentiality, and lacked standardized guidelines and training. The communication of information during handover was limited and varied significantly based on time, high-risk classification, and location. The study also identified factors that hinder effective handover, including lack of team communication and guidelines, organizational culture, and individual clinician factors. The findings suggest opportunities for improving the handover process to enhance women's safety.
BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH
(2022)
Article
Education, Scientific Disciplines
Ray Samuriwo, Alison Bullock, Katie Webb, Lynn V. Monrouxe
Summary: In narratives of encounters related to patient safety with trainee doctors, experienced nurses constructed seven identities, which related to the two key roles of nurses as educators and as practitioners.
Article
Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
Antonia Delistavrou, Irene Tilikidou, Eugenia Papaioannou
Summary: Despite technological innovations, there has been limited research on consumer behavior towards green consumer packaged goods. This study examined consumers' intentions to buy innovative cosmetics and detergents made from recycled CO2. Applying a TPB model extended by climate change risk perception in four European countries, the study found that attitudes, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control mediate the relationship between risk perception and intentions. The analysis also revealed differences among German, French, Greek, and Spanish consumers based on the influence of significant others and personal control factors on their buying intentions.
JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
(2023)
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Iwona Malinowska-Lipien, Agnieszka Micek, Teresa Gabrys, Maria Kozka, Krzysztof Gajda, Agnieszka Gniadek, Tomasz Brzostek, Allison Squires
Summary: The research evaluated the attitudes of nurses and physicians towards factors influencing hospitalized patient safety, with both groups scoring highest in stress recognition and lowest in evaluating working conditions. Nurses scored significantly lower than physicians in every aspect of safety attitudes evaluation, highlighting the importance of positive working conditions and effective teamwork in improving employees' attitudes towards patient safety.
Article
Ergonomics
Chandrakantan Subramaniam, Johanim Johari, Munir Shehu Mashi, Rohaizah Mohamad
Summary: This study examines the relationships among safety leadership, safety motivation, safety knowledge, and safety behavior in a tertiary hospital in Klang Valley, Malaysia. Based on the self-efficacy theory, it is argued that high-quality safety leadership can enhance nurses' safety knowledge and motivation, which in turn improves their safety behavior. The findings reveal that safety knowledge and safety motivation significantly predict nurses' safety behavior, and they serve as important mediators in the relationship between safety leadership and nurses' safety compliance and participation.
JOURNAL OF SAFETY RESEARCH
(2023)
Article
Health Care Sciences & Services
Venja Musche, Hannah Kohler, Alexander Baeuerle, Adam Schweda, Benjamin Weismueller, Madeleine Fink, Theresa Schadendorf, Anita Robitzsch, Nora Doerrie, Susanne Tan, Martin Teufel, Eva-Maria Skoda
Summary: This study aimed to assess the psychological burden of individuals with diabetes during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to matched controls. Patients with diabetes did not show higher levels of generalized anxiety or depressive symptoms, but reported higher COVID-19-related fear and more adherent and dysfunctional safety behaviors. Individuals with diabetes exhibited an adequate perception and functional reaction to the current pandemic, despite being at a significant risk for severe COVID-19.