Artículos académicos Extreme work environment and career commitment of nurses: empirical evidence from Egypt and Peru

Extreme work environment and career commitment of nurses: empirical evidence from Egypt and Peru

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Autoría

Año de publicación

2023

Palabras clave

extreme context, COVID-19, Transactional theory of stress, Egypt, Peru, Career commitment, Transactional stress model

Título en español

Ambiente laboral extremo y compromiso profesional de las enfermeras: evidencia empírica de Egipto y Perú

Purpose

This paper aim to analyse the motives behind the commitment of nurses to their profession despite their intense job duties during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Design/methodology/approach

The empirical sample comprises of 35 semi-structured interviews with public sector hospital nurses in under-researched contexts of Egypt and Peru.

Findings

Three types of motives were found to play a critical role in nurses’ commitment to their profession despite the difficulties associated with extreme work conditions. These factors include cultural (religious values, governmental coercion), contextual (limited education, organisational support) and personal (good nurse identity, submissive nature) dimensions.

Originality/value

This paper is one of the pioneering works to link existing literature streams on career commitment, extreme jobs, extreme context and management under disruptions (particularly COVID-19) by analysing these aspects in the under-researched Peruvian and Egyptian contexts.

Referencia:

Mousa, M., Arslan, A., Abdelgaffar, H., Seclen Luna, J.P. and De la Gala Velasquez, B.R.D. (2023), “Extreme work environment and career commitment of nurses: empirical evidence from Egypt and Peru”, International Journal of Organizational Analysis

Mohamed Mousa

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