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Published in: BMC Health Services Research 1/2017

Open Access 01-12-2017 | Research article

Got spirit? The spiritual climate scale, psychometric properties, benchmarking data and future directions

Authors: Keith Doram, Whitney Chadwick, Joni Bokovoy, Jochen Profit, Janel D. Sexton, J. Bryan Sexton

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

Background

Organizations that encourage the respectful expression of diverse spiritual views have higher productivity and performance, and support employees with greater organizational commitment and job satisfaction. Within healthcare, there is a paucity of studies which define or intervene on the spiritual needs of healthcare workers, or examine the effects of a pro-spirituality environment on teamwork and patient safety. Our objective was to describe a novel survey scale for evaluating spiritual climate in healthcare workers, evaluate its psychometric properties, provide benchmarking data from a large faith-based healthcare system, and investigate relationships between spiritual climate and other predictors of patient safety and job satisfaction.

Methods

Cross-sectional survey study of US healthcare workers within a large, faith-based health system.

Results

Seven thousand nine hundred twenty three of 9199 eligible healthcare workers across 325 clinical areas within 16 hospitals completed our survey in 2009 (86% response rate). The spiritual climate scale exhibited good psychometric properties (internal consistency: Cronbach α = .863). On average 68% (SD 17.7) of respondents of a given clinical area expressed good spiritual climate, although assessments varied widely (14 to 100%). Spiritual climate correlated positively with teamwork climate (r = .434, p < .001) and safety climate (r = .489, p < .001). Healthcare workers reporting good spiritual climate were less likely to have intentions to leave, to be burned out, or to experience disruptive behaviors in their unit and more likely to have participated in executive rounding (p < .001 for each variable).

Conclusions

The spiritual climate scale exhibits good psychometric properties, elicits results that vary widely by clinical area, and aligns well with other culture constructs that have been found to correlate with clinical and organizational outcomes.
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Metadata
Title
Got spirit? The spiritual climate scale, psychometric properties, benchmarking data and future directions
Authors
Keith Doram
Whitney Chadwick
Joni Bokovoy
Jochen Profit
Janel D. Sexton
J. Bryan Sexton
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2017
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-017-2050-5

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