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Occupational Precariousness of Nursing Staff in Catalonia's Public and Private Nursing Homes.

Ana Mari Fité-SerraMontserrat Gea-SanchezÁlvaro Alconada-RomeroJosé Tomás MateosJoan Blanco-BlancoEva Barallat-GimenoJudith Roca-LlobetCarles Muntaner
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2019)
Nursing staff who provide care in the nursing homes of Catalonia have more precarious work conditions, including more demanding schedules and work overload, than those in other areas of care. This situation entails two major problems: Detrimental health results for nurses who face psychosocial and physical risks and a negative impact on the care provided to patients, with a decrease in the quality of care. This study aimed to describe the precarious employment situation of nursing staff in nursing homes. We carried out a descriptive study based on the employment precariousness scale (EPRES), which was administered to a sample of 239 nurses and nursing assistants working in public and private nursing homes in Catalonia. The highest level of job insecurity occurred among nursing assistants and in privately managed nursing homes. The precariousness of the working conditions of nursing staff poses a risk both to the workers themselves and to the people they tend to. For this reason, there is a need for greater knowledge on the scale of the problem and the implementation of appropriate legislative measures to alleviate it.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • quality improvement
  • mental illness
  • palliative care
  • primary care
  • emergency department
  • affordable care act
  • pain management
  • risk assessment
  • chronic pain
  • human health