Preferences for Performance Appraisal Based on Method Used, Type of Rater, and Purpose of Evaluation

1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 963-969 ◽  
Author(s):  
James L. Jordan ◽  
Deovina B. Nasis

52 registered nurses were asked about their preferences toward performance appraisal in terms of (a) the method used, (b) by whom they wanted to be rated, and (c) for what reasons they would want to be rated. Nurses preferred quantitative scales which rely on external work-related criteria over ratings directly comparing them to others and ratings without scales. They preferred ratings made by peers, self, and supervisors over ratings made by subordinates. Finally, they preferred that ratings be conducted for promotion and compensation purposes over ratings for shift and working assignments and layoff and retirement decisions.

2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. e3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deborah L McBride ◽  
Sandra A LeVasseur ◽  
Dongmei Li

2017 ◽  
Vol 67 (659) ◽  
pp. e428-e436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Cheshire ◽  
Damien Ridge ◽  
John Hughes ◽  
David Peters ◽  
Maria Panagioti ◽  
...  

Background‘Neoliberal’ work policies, austerity, NHS restructuring, and increased GP consultation rates provide the backdrop against increasing reports of GP burnout and an impending shortage of GPs.AimTo explore GPs’ experiences of workplace challenges and stresses, and their coping strategies, particularly focusing on understanding the impact of recent NHS workplace change.Design and settingStudy design was qualitative, with data collected from two focus groups and seven one-to-one telephone interviews.MethodFocus groups and one-to-one telephone interviews explored the experiences of GPs currently practising in England, recruited through convenience sampling. Data were collected using a semi-structured interview approach and analysed using thematic analysis.ResultsThere were 22 GP participants recruited: focus groups (n = 15) and interviews (n = 7). Interviewees understood GPs to be under intense and historically unprecedented pressures, which were tied to the contexts in which they work, with important moral implications for ‘good’ doctoring. Many reported that being a full-time GP was too stressful: work-related stress led to mood changes, sleep disruption, increases in anxiety, and tensions with loved ones. Some had subsequently sought ways to downsize their clinical workload. Workplace change resulted in little time for the things that helped GP resilience: a good work–life balance and better contact with colleagues. Although some GPs were coping better than others, GPs acknowledged that there was only so much an individual GP could do to manage their stress, given the external work issues they faced.ConclusionGPs experience their emotional lives and stresses as being meaningfully shaped by NHS factors. To support GPs to provide effective care, resilience building should move beyond the individual to include systemic work issues.


Nursing Forum ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilyn Smith ◽  
Patricia Droppleman ◽  
Sandra P. Thomas

2021 ◽  
pp. 205715852098845
Author(s):  
Dip Raj Thapa ◽  
Anette Ekström-Bergström ◽  
Alexandra Krettek ◽  
Kristina Areskoug-Josefsson

Registered nurses and midwives are in short supply and have among the highest rates of sick leave in the global workforce. The aim of this study was therefore to explore and gain a deeper understanding of how nurses and midwives experience their everyday work, with a view toward promoting and sustaining their work-related health. Nine registered nurses and four registered midwives working in hospitals and community healthcare facilities in Sweden were interviewed. The interviews were analyzed using content analysis. This study is reported in accordance with COREQ. One main category emerged: ‘Quality of organizational and collegial support and opportunities to facilitate recovery, health, and patient care’. From this category, four generic categories describing the overall experiences of registered nurses and midwives could be discerned. Based on these results, it is recommended that employers adopt a systematic health-promotive approach to foster and maintain the workplace health of registered nurses and midwives.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 69
Author(s):  
Ibrahim Yahya Alhakami ◽  
Omar Ghazi Baker

Objective: Considering nurses’ psychological status, work decision involvement, emotions, anxiety, and motivation, is an important issue for attaining nurses’ retention and maintaining their preservation in their work positions. Work motivation is the key that enhances employee performance which is influenced by numerous internal and external factors; job anxiety is the apparent one. The current study is directed to achieve two aims: to assess the work motivation level and self-rated anxiety among nurses and to investigate the relationship between them. Therefore, a descriptive, correlative research design was applied with 300 registered nurses in King Abd El Aziz governmental hospital in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.Methods: A triple-section questionnaire was used for data collection that involved: First, Multidimensional Work Motivation Scale (MWMS) that was developed by Gagne et al. in 2010. Second, Self-Rated Anxiety Sub-scale which was developed by Warr et al. in 1979. Third, sociodemographic questions were included.Results: About three-quarters of Suadi nurses have high work motivation level concerning introjected and identified regulations while more than half of them have a high level of work motivation regarding amotivation and extrinsic regulations. Consequently, most of the participants have high scores in work motivation level. As regards, self-rated anxiety, all study subjects have a certain level of anxiety at work, but the majority of them were with low level. As pertaining the correlation between both study variables, there is a negative correlation between work motivation level and self-rated anxiety and the present study proved that Saudi registered nurses in King Abd El Aziz governmental hospital have high work motivation level scores with low self-rated anxiety scores.Conclusions: The current study confirms that the Saudi nurses in Jeddah have high work motivation level with low anxiety. Furthermore, the study provides evidence of a negative or inverse correlation between work motivation level and self-rated anxiety among Saudi registered nurses in King Abd El Aziz governmental hospital. Nurses should be aware by the importance of motivation in their job and at the same time, be aware of the risks of work-related anxiety. Nurse Managers have to tailor all factors which are surrounding nurses in a hospital environment, organizational structure and culture to be positively motivated and, at the same time, to alleviate any tendency of work-related anxiety. Furthermore, work motivation and anxiety should be involved and integrated into the nursing curriculum in nursing schools.Further researches: A research about the effect of the work motivation educational program on nurse manager’s leadership skills, is needed. A study about the correlation between work motivation and other negative or positive variables in work environment among nurses is necessitated. Also, assessment of nurses’ work motivation and anxiety using different tools such as value test, emotional inventory and adjustment skills measurement.


2010 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Malliarou ◽  
Pavlos Sarafis ◽  
Eleni Moustaka ◽  
Thamme Kouvela ◽  
Theodoros T.C Constantinidis

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