Conflict management and job characteristics of nurses in South African public hospitals
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Milton, David R.
Nel, Jan Alewyn
Havenga, Werner
Rabie, Tinda
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Taylor and Francis
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Abstract
This study sought to determine whether job demands and job resources predicted conflict handling styles among nurses
within South African public hospitals. A convenience sample of 205 nurses were included (males = 10.7%; age range 46
to 60 years = 38.5%, experience of 5 years and more = 70.8%, African = 92.2%). They completed Rahim’s Organisational
Conflict Inventory – II (ROCI–II: Rahim, 1986) and a job characteristics measure developed for this study. Data were
analysed to assess which job demands and resources predicted which conflict handling styles. From the results, time
demands, crisis management and colleague support predicted the use of an avoiding style, whereas workload, time
demands, job security, feedback and colleague support predict the use of the integrating style. Time demands and payment
predicted the use of the obliging style, while workload, crisis management and payment predicted the use of the dominating
style. The compromising style was predicted by colleague support. It seems from the findings that conflict is frequently
predicted by time demands.
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Milton, D.R. et al. 2015. Conflict management and job characteristics of nurses in South African public hospitals. Journal of psychology in Africa, 25(4):288–296. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14330237.2015.1078085]
