The Effects of Cultural Competence on Nurses Burnout

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, pp.300-304 http://dx.doi.org/10.14257/astl.2014.47.68 The Effects of Cultural Competence on Nurses Burnout So-Yun, Choi 1, Kyung-Sook, Kim 2 Department of Social Welfare, Namseoul University, Department of Nursing, Namseoul University, 1 First Author sychoi@nsu.ac.kr, 2Corresponding Author kgs4321@nsu.ac.kr Abstract. This study is to examine the effects of cultural competence on nurses burnout, controlling the effects of precedent factors of burnout identified by previous studies. Nurses who are working at six small- and middle-size hospitals under 400 beds, located in Seoul and Gyeonggi-do, participated in this study. The data were collected by standardized measures of cultural competence, burnout, and workload, superior supervision and 182 were analyzed. The analysis includes descriptive statistics of respondents general characteristics, correlation analysis of relationships among variables, hierarchical regression analysis of the effects of precedent variables on work burnout. Cultural competence (cultural knowledge and skill, cultural awareness, cultural attitude) is a statistically significant variable predicting burnout. The significance of this study is that it lays the foundation for nurses cultural competence by examining the effects of nurses cultural competence on burnout. Also, work-related competence is not a choice but a must, more diverse education should be provided to improve nurses cultural competence for multicultural patients. Keywords: cultural competence, burnout, workload, supervision 1 Introduction Effective implementation and organizational performance require competence in a wide range of skills. Especially cultural competence, which utilizes the diversity of patients and cultural components in the process of nursing practice, is regarded as an essential competence of healthcare professionals, as Korea enters the line of multicultural society [1]. Cultural competence should be one of the most important professional competence of nurses because they have to provide rapidly increasing multicultural patients and their families with quality human services. The more important reason is that the lack of cultural competence can lead to job stress and burnout, and then to a decline in the service quality of nurses. Although cultural competence is needed to help patients and clients with diverse cultural backgrounds effectively, there is a skeptical view that it is nearly impossible to gain perfect cultural competence [2]. Despite the skepticism, the reason this study pays special attention to the importance of cultural competence is that the inability of employees to make clients and patients better can lead to cynical attitude and burnout [3],[4]. ISSN: 2287-1233 ASTL Copyright 2014 SERSC

Since previous studies of nurses cultural competence mainly focused on the precedent factors of cultural competence, the study on the effects of cultural competence on the organizational behavior is rare. However, cultural competence is not only a result influenced by precedent factors but also a precedent factor influencing the quality of service and work attitude. Therefore, it is essential to examine the effects of cultural competence on nurses work attitude. The main purpose of this study is to examine the effects of cultural competence on nurses burnout, controlling the effects of precedent factors of burnout identified by previous studies. According to previous studies, work characteristics such as heavy workload and role ambiguity increase burnout, and support from superior and organization reduces burnout. This study empirically analyzes the relationships between cultural competence and nurses work attitude, going beyond previous studies mainly focused on current state of cultural competence and its precedent factors. 2 Research Issues This study examines the current state of nurses cultural competence and burnout, and then explores how nurses cultural competence affects their work burnout. Three main research issues are: 1) Examines the current state of nurses cultural competence and work burnout. 2) Identifies the effects of nurses work characteristics and superior support on burnout. 3) Analyzes the effects of cultural competence on burnout, controlling the effects of nurses work characteristics and superior support. 3 Research Method Nurses who are working at six small- and middle-size hospitals under 400 beds, located in Seoul and Gyeonggi-do, participated in this study. 187 survey questionnaires among 200 distributed were collected, and 182 were analyzed. The survey was conducted from June to July in 2011. The questionnaire included measures such as socio-demographic characteristics (age, education, multicultural education, length of employment, foreign language skill) and major precedent variables (workload, role ambiguity, superior supervision). The workload was measured by the measure developed by Hackman and Oldham [5] and used by Yoon[6]. The role ambiguity was measured by modified version of the measure developed by Rizzo et al.[7] and reported with validity in Korea. The superior supervision was measured by the Job Descriptive Index developed by Smith, Kendall, and Hulin [8] and used by Lee [9]. The cultural competence included such items as cultural awareness (5), cultural attitude (8), cultural knowledge and skill (20), Copyright 2014 SERSC 301

and was measured by the measure developed by Choi [10]. For the burnout, the MBI developed by Maslach and Jackson [11] was used. In order to reinforce research ethics, the protection of secret and the right of rejection were notified, and the questionnaires unsigned were collected personally by researchers. The analysis of the data was conducted by using SPSS 18.0. The analysis includes descriptive statistics of respondents general characteristics, correlation analysis of relationships among variables, hierarchical regression analysis of the effects of precedent variables on work burnout. 4 Results of the Study 4.1. General Characteristics of Respondents and Work Characteristics Every respondent is woman except one man (0.5%). Average age is 30.8, average length of employment is 88.0 months, and average length of employment at current hospital is 54.5 months. 74%(133) graduated from community college, and 26%(46) graduated from college or universities. Regarding foreign language skill which is a personal competence related to multicultural clients, only 14%(24) have sufficient foreign language skill. 81.6% have experiences of multicultural work, and 35.2% are now in charge of multicultural patients. The most often contacting patients are foreign workers (54.5%), married immigrate women (26.9%), and children of multicultural families (15.8%). The nurses who received multicultural education within two years were only five. 93.9% of nurses do not work with workers of different race and ethnicity, and 6.2%(11) of nurses work with workers of different race and ethnicity. 31.7% responded that translation services for clients were provided, and 21.3% said that work guidelines related to multicultural work were provided. 4.2. The Results of Hierarchical Regression Analysis Hierarchical regression analysis was used to identify variables affecting burnout. Model 1 which analyzes the effects of work characteristics shows that workload does not account for burnout, but that role ambiguity has statistically significant effects ( R 2 =.07, P<.001). Model 2 which includes superior supervision shows that the effects of superior supervision affecting burnout are relatively small ( R 2 =.08, P<.001). Model 3 shows that cultural competence (cultural knowledge and skill, cultural awareness, cultural attitude) is a statistically significant variable predicting burnout ( R 2 =.277, P<.001). However, superior supervision which significantly affects burnout in Model 2 does not have significant effects in Model 3. In addition, 302 Copyright 2014 SERSC

the result indicates that nurses who think that they have cultural competence have lower level of burnout. [Table 1: The Result of Hierarchical Regression Analysis] Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Β t β t β t Workload -.06-1.07 -.042 -.79.09 1.85 Role Ambiguity.28 5.71***.24 4.51***.18 3.81*** Superior Supervision Cultural Knowledge and Skill -.11-1.98* -.05 -.98 -.17-2.34* Cultural Attitude -.34-3.58*** Cultural Awareness -.17-2.33* R 2.076.084.287 Adjusted R 2.071.078.277 Constant 1.66 2.11 4.16 F 17.55 3.92 40.32 F Sig..000.048.000 5 Discussion and Implications The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of nurses cultural competence on burnout. The results show that cultural competence is a significant factor affecting nurses burnout. After controlling the effects of work characteristics and superior supervision which were identified by previous studies, this hierarchical regression analysis of cultural competence shows that cultural competence has statistically significant effects on nurses burnout. On the basis of major findings of empirical data analysis, this study suggests some strategies to enhance the quality of nursing in multicultural society. First, nurses burnout is higher than any other healthcare professionals. As this study shows that role ambiguity has more significant effects on burnout than heavy workload, more efforts to enhance the identity and clarity of nurses role are needed. Second, the effort to reduce and mediate the impact of nurses burnout is an important strategy to improve the quality of nursing. As an effective strategy to mediate the impact of nurses burnout, clinical supervision has been suggested. Since Copyright 2014 SERSC 303

1990s, many studies of supervision have been applied to the field of nursing in the United States. In addition, the system to enhance work-related ability through superior support and supervision should be strengthened, because supervision has some educational impact. Third, study on the cultural competence of healthcare professionals in Korean multicultural society is just the beginning. Since work-related competence is not a choice but a must, more diverse education should be provided to improve nurses cultural competence for multicultural patients. The significance of this study is that it lays the foundation for nurses cultural competence by examining the effects of nurses cultural competence on burnout, differently from previous studies which mainly focused on the current state of nurses cultural competence and precedent factors. With various viewpoints and diverse approaches, more in-depth discussions of the ways to enhance nurses cultural competence are needed in Korean multicultural society. References 1. Achmann, E.: Developing cultural competence in health care setting Pediatric Nursing, Vol. 8, no. 2, pp.134-137, 2002. 2. Kim, K. D.: Social Philosophical Analysis of Critical Discourses on the Cultural Competence. Korean Journal of Social Welfare, Vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 239-260, 2011. 3. Reichers, A. E., Wanous, J. P., & Austin T. T.: Understanding and managing cynicism about organizational change, Academy of Management Executive, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 48-59, 1997. 4. Abraham, R.: Organizational Cynicism: Bases and Consequences, Genetic, Social, and General Psychology. Monographs, Vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 269-292, 2000. 5. Hackman, J. R. and Oldham, G. R. Development of Job Diagnostic Survey. Journal of Applied Psychology, Vol. 60, pp. 159 170, 1975. 6. Yoon, G. S., Kim, S. Y.: Influences of job stress and burnout on turnover intention of nurses. Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration, vol. 16, no. 4, pp, 507-516, 2010. 7. Rizzo, J. R., R. J. House, and S. E. Lirtzman: Role Conflict and Ambiguity in Complex Organizations," Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 19, no. 6, pp. 150-16, 1970. 8. Smith, P. C., Kendall, L. M., & Hulin, C. L. The Measurement of Satisfaction in Work and Retirement. Chicago: Rand McNally. 1969. 9. Lee, E. J..A study of the Vocational Rehabilitation Effects on the Job Satisfaction. Unpublished Master s dissertation, Yonsei University of Korea, Seoul. 1993. 10. Choi, S. Y. A Study on the Development of Cultural Competence Measure for Helping Professions. Journal of Community Welfare, Vol. 2, no.26, pp. 23-53, 2010. 11. Maslach, C. and Jackson, S. E.: The Measurement of Experienced Burnout. Journal of Occupational Behavior. vol. 2, pp. 91-113, 1981. 304 Copyright 2014 SERSC