Empowering leadership, perceived organizational support, trust, and job burnout for nurses: a study in an Italian general hospital
Auteur Andrea Bobbio
Auteur Maria Bellan
Auteur Anna Maria Manganelli
Résumé BACKGROUND A strong nursing leadership that instills trust in the leader and in the organization is an important component for an effective leadership, particularly for health care organizations, because trust defines the heart of health care workplaces by promoting patient safety, excellence in care, recruitment, and retention of the nursing staff. PURPOSE This study aimed to test the impact of perceived empowerment leadership style expressed by the nurse supervisor, nurses’ perceived organizational support, trust in the leader, and trust in the organization on nurses’ job burnout. METHODOLOGY/APPROACH A group of 273 nurses from an Italian public general hospital took part in a cross-sectional study on a voluntary basis by filling out an anonymous questionnaire. FINDINGS Empowering leadership was an important predictor of trust in the leader. Trust in the organization was influenced by perceived organizational support and by the Informing dimension of the empowering leadership style. Trust in the leader and trust in the organization showed a negative impact on job burnout and also mediated the effects of some empowering leadership dimensions and perceived organizational support on job burnout. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS The central role of trust in health care organizations was corroborated, as well as the beneficial effects of adopting specific features of empowerment leadership behaviors toward the nursing staff. Empowering leadership could be successfully proposed in training programs directed to nurses’ supervisors and health care managers.
Publication Health Care Management Review
Volume 37
Numéro 1
Pages 77-87
Date 2012 Jan-Mar
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doi:10.1097/HMR.0b013e31822242b2
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