期刊论文详细信息
BMC Public Health
Does workplace social capital predict care quality through job satisfaction and stress at the clinic? A prospective study
Hanne Berthelsen1  Mikaela Owen2  Hugo Westerlund3 
[1] Centre for Work Life and Evaluation Studies (CTA) & Faculty of Odontology, Malmö University, Malmö, Sweden;Centre for Workplace Excellence, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia;Department of Psychology, The Stress Research Institute, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden;
关键词: COPSOQ;    Psychosocial work environment;    Performance;    Dental fillings;    Dentistry;    Health care;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s12889-021-11320-8
来源: Springer
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【 摘 要 】

BackgroundWelfare societies like Sweden face challenges in balancing the budget while meeting the demand for good quality healthcare. The aim of this study was to analyse whether care quality, operationalized as survival of dental fillings, is predicted by workplace social capital and if this effect is direct or indirect (through stress and/or job satisfaction among staff at the clinic), controlling for patient demographics.MethodsThe prospective design includes A) work environment data from surveys of 75 general public dental clinics (aggregated data based on 872 individual ratings), and B) register-based survival of 9381dental fillings performed during a 3-month period around the time of the survey, and C) patient demographics (age, gender, income level and birth place). Using a multi-level discrete-time proportional hazard model, we tested whether clinic-level social capital, stress, and job satisfaction could predict tooth-level filling failure, controlling for patient demographics. One direct and two indirect pathways, moderated by filling tooth, location, and filling type, were tested.ResultsHigh workplace social capital reduced the risk of early failure of fillings in molar teeth, mediated by group-perceived job satisfaction (indirect path: OR = 0.93, p < .05, direct path from job satisfaction: OR = 0.89, p < .05). Contrary to expectations, we found no support for a direct effect from social capital on care quality or for the indirect pathway via stress at the clinic level.ConclusionsWorkplace social capital boosted the quality of dental fillings through increased levels of job satisfaction. In addition, staff at clinics with higher social capital reported less stress and higher levels of job satisfaction. These results indicate that promotion of social capital may improve both occupational health and care quality.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   

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