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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Evaluation of emotional skills in nursing using regression and QCA models: A transversal study
María Del Carmen Giménez-espertSelene Valero-morenoVicente Prado-gascosubject
AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectEmpathyNursing Staff HospitalEducationYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNursingLinear regressionHumans030212 general & internal medicineQualitative ResearchGeneral NursingEmotional Intelligencemedia_common030504 nursingHospitals PublicQualitative comparative analysisEmotional intelligenceRegression analysisMiddle AgedNursing Evaluation ResearchSpainPerspective-takingScale (social sciences)Linear ModelsTraitFemaleNurse-Patient Relations0305 other medical sciencePsychologydescription
Abstract Background Emotional skills are fundamental for quality service by nursing professionals, providing more personalized attention and a close relationship between the professional and patient. Objectives To compare linear relationship models (linear regressions) and models based on comparative qualitative analysis (QCA) in the analysis of the possible influence of socio-demographic variables (age and sex), working conditions (type of contract and seniority) and academic training (type of degree and specific training) on emotional abilities (emotional intelligence and empathy) in nursing. Design It is a transversal design in a single temporary moment. Participants The sample of this study consisted of 217 direct patient care nursing professionals from 7 public hospitals in Valencia, Spain. Methods The Jefferson Scale for Nursing Empathy was used to measure empathy and the Trait of Meta-Mood Scale 24 to measure emotional intelligence. Two different statistical methodologies were used: traditional regression models and qualitative comparative analysis models of fuzzy sets (fsQCA). Results The results of the regression model suggest that only sex (negatively in the case of perspective taking) and positively (in compassionate care and thinking like the patient) is a predictive variable in the case of empathy, but not in emotional intelligence. Thus, the results of the fsQCA models provide a greater amount of predictive value for both emotional intelligence and empathy, although when varying the variables that best explained the dimensions, the type of contract and age were the main conditions that were sufficient but not necessary. Conclusions Given the differences in linear relationship models and fsQCA, far from prioritizing one technique over another, both are complementary and should be used simultaneously in other studies.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019-03-01 | Nurse Education Today |