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
CITATION STYLE
Doram, K., Chadwick, W., Bokovoy, J., Profit, J., Sexton, J. D., & Sexton, J. B. (2017). Got spirit? the spiritual climate scale, psychometric properties, benchmarking data and future directions. BMC Health Services Research, 17(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-017-2050-5
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