Nursing home managers' quality of work life and health outcomes: a pre-pandemic profile over time

BMJ Lead. 2024 Feb 22:leader-2023-000876. doi: 10.1136/leader-2023-000876. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Aim: To examine trends in quality of work life and health outcomes of managers in nursing homes in Western Canada pre-pandemic.

Methods: A repeated cross-sectional descriptive study using data collected in 2014-2015, 2017 and 2019-2020, in the Translating Research in Elder Care Programme. Self-reported measures of demographics, physical/mental health and quality of work life (eg, job satisfaction, burnout, work engagement) were administered and completed by nursing home managers. We used two-way analysis of variance to compare scores across times, controlling for clustering effects at the nursing home level.

Results: Samples for data collection times 1, 2, 3, respectively, were 168, 193 and 199. Most nursing home managers were nurses by profession (80.63-81.82%). Job satisfaction scores were high across time (mean=4.42-4.48). The physical (mean=51.53-52.27) and mental (mean=51.66-52.13) status scores were stable over time. Workplace engagement (vigour, dedication and absorption) scores were high and stable over time in all three dimensions.

Conclusions: Nursing home managers were highly satisfied, had high levels of physical and mental health, and generally reported that their work was meaningful over time pre-COVID-19 pandemic. We provided a comparison for future research assessing the impacts of the pandemic on quality of work life and health outcomes.

Keywords: leadership assessment; management; measurement; nurse.