Content area

Abstract

Aim

The purpose of this study is to describe the association between the practice environment and nurse educator outcomes (burnout, engagement, incivility, job satisfaction and intention to leave) in public nursing education institutions in the Gauteng province of South Africa.

Background

The practice environment holds the most promise for recruiting and retaining a qualified and engaged nurse workforce; however, the association between the practice environment and nurse educator outcomes has been relatively unexplored.

Design

Cross-sectional design.

Methods

The Gauteng province was purposively selected, as it has the highest number of public nursing education institutions in South Africa. All-inclusive sampling was applied to public nursing educations institutions in Gauteng province (N = 6) and then to Heads of Department (N = 30; n = 17) and nurse educators (senior lecturers [N = 162; n = 45] and lecturers [N = 257; n = 80]). Data were collected during March to November 2018. The data were collected using the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index; Maslach Burnout Inventory - Educators Survey; Utrecht Work Engagement Scale (UWES); Incivility in Nursing Education-Revised (INE-R); job satisfaction and Propensity to Leave Scale.

Results

The results show that nurse educators are an aging population, with limited numbers having master’s and doctoral qualifications. The most job dissatisfaction is regarding wages (M=2.0; SD 1.07); appreciation, recognition and rewards for good work (M=2.1; SD 1.01); and opportunities for advancement (M=2.2; SD 1.01). The nurse educators do not experience their public nursing education institutions as having a positive practice environment. Nurse educators experienced high levels of work engagement, moderate levels of burnout and low levels of incivility, that were highly correlated with the subscale of foundations of quality outcomes. They experienced moderate levels of job satisfaction but did not intend to leave their places of employment, which was highly correlated with the subscale of manager’s ability, leadership and support.

Conclusions

A positive practice environment improves nurse educator outcomes. The subscale of foundations of quality outcomes and manager’s ability, leadership and support had the most impact on nurse educator outcomes, thus quality teaching practices should be cultivated and recognised; and managers must have the necessary skill and knowledge to lead effectively, while also including nurse educators in decisions that impact them and involving them in the affairs of the nursing education institution. There is a shortage of qualified nurse educators globally and in South Africa and urgent attention must be given to factors that influence the recruitment and retention of nurse educators.

Twitter abstract

The practice environment holds the most promise for recruiting and retaining a qualified and engaged nurse educator workforce, especially regarding foundations of quality outcomes and manager’s ability, leadership and support.

Details

Title
The association between the practice environment and selected nurse educator outcomes in public nursing education institutions: A cross-sectional study
Author
Bence, Anna F 1 ; Coetzee, Siedine K 1 ; Klopper, Hester C 2 ; Ellis, Suria M 3 

 NUMIQ Research Focus Area, School of Nursing Science, North-West University, Potchefstroom, South Africa 
 Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa 
 Unit for Business, Mathematics and Informatics, North-West University, Potchefstroom, South Africa 
Pages
103261
Publication year
2022
Publication date
Jan 2022
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
14715953
e-ISSN
18735223
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2621243830
Copyright
©2021. Elsevier Ltd