Objectives: to analyze the predictors of moral harassment in nursing work in critical care units. Methods: a cross-sectional study conducted in a public hospital in Fortaleza, Ceará, with 167 nursing professionals in 2016. Sociodemographic/occupational questionnaire and Negative Acts Questionnaire Revised were applied. The analysis included descriptive statistics, measures of central tendency and dispersion, as well as Mann-Whitney, Kruskal-Wallis and Conover Inman U-tests for multiple comparisons. Results: there was a 33% prevalence of self-perception of moral harassment, highlighting personal/professional disqualification and work-related harassment. The predictors of moral harassment included age, time working in the job and time in the unit, employment relationship and sector. Conclusions: young professionals (< 30 years), cooperative, crowded in intensive care or emergency units, with less time working in the job (< 5 years) or greater time in the unit (above 10 years) are the biggest victims of moral harassment in the work of nursing in critical environments.
CITATION STYLE
de Sousa, L. S., Oliveira, R. M., Santiago, J. C. D. S., Bandeira, É. da S., Brito, Y. C. F., Alves, H. F. A., & de Almeida, P. C. (2021). Predictors of moral harassment in nursing work in critical care units. Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem, 74(3). https://doi.org/10.1590/0034-7167-2020-0442
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