63,546 research outputs found
Relationship between big five personality factors, problem solving and medical errors
Background: Human behavior is recognized as the main factor in the occurrence of accidents (70�90 percent), with human personality and problem solving ability as two related factors in the occurrence of medical errors (annually 42.7 million in the world). The objectives of this study were to investigate the relationship between personality factors, problem solving ability and medical errors. Material and methods: This study was a questionnaire case control study. Information on 49 members of medical and nursing staff with medical errors (case group) and 46 without medical errors (control group) were analyzed. To collect the data, two Heppner problem solving questionnaires and the NEO-Five Factor Inventory were used, which were completed by the study population. Results: The results illustrate that individuals without medical errors showed higher scores in contentiousness, extraversion and agreeableness and lower scores in neuroticism than those with medical errors. Individuals without medical errors also showed higher scores in problem solving ability scales than those with medical errors. Conclusion: Results of this study, suggest that personality factors and problem solving ability are related to medical errors and it may be possible for hospital authorities to use this knowledge when selecting capable medical staff. © 2018 The Author
Individual differences and health in chronic pain: are sex-differences relevant?
Background: Because psychological variables are known to intercorrelate, the goal of this investigation was to
compare the unique association between several well-established psychological constructs in pain research and
pain-related outcomes. Sex differences are considered because pain is experienced differently across sex groups.
Methods: Participants were 456 consecutive chronic pain patients attending a tertiary pain clinic (mean age = 58.4
years, SD = 14.8, 63.6% women). The study design was cross-sectional. Psychological constructs included personality
(NEO-Five Factor Inventory), irrational thinking (General Attitudes and Beliefs Scale), and coping (Social Problem
Solving Inventory). Outcomes were pain severity and interference (Brief Pain Inventory) and physical, general, and
mental health status (Short Form-36). To decide whether the bivariate analyses and the two-block, multivariate
linear regressions for each study outcome (block 1 = age, sex, and pain severity; block 2 = psychological variables)
should be conducted with the whole sample or split by sex, we first explored whether sex moderated the
relationship between psychological variables and outcomes. An alpha level of 0.001 was set to reduce the risk of
type I errors due to multiple comparisons.
Results: The moderation analyses indicated no sex differences in the association between psychological variables
and study outcomes (all interaction terms p > .05). Thus, further analyses were calculated with the whole sample.
Specifically, the bivariate analyses revealed that psychological constructs were intercorrelated in the expected
direction and mostly correlated with mental health and overall perceived health status. In the regressions, when
controlling for age, sex, and pain severity, psychological factors as a block significantly increased the explained
variance of physical functioning (ΔR2 = .037, p < .001), general health (ΔR2 = .138, p < .001), and mental health
(ΔR2 = .362, p < .001). However, unique associations were only obtained for mental health and neuroticism (β = −
0.30, p < .001) and a negative problem orientation (β = − 0.26, p < .001).
Conclusions: There is redundancy in the relationship between psychological variables and pain-related outcomes
and the strength of this association is highest for mental health status. The association between psychological
characteristics and health outcomes was comparable for men and women, which suggests that the same
therapeutic targets could be selected in psychological interventions of pain patients irrespective of sex
My next client:Understanding the Big Five and positive personality dispositions of those seeking psychosocial support interventions
An Exploratory Study of Patient Falls
Debate continues between the contribution of education level and clinical expertise in the nursing practice environment. Research suggests a link between Baccalaureate of Science in Nursing (BSN) nurses and positive patient outcomes such as lower mortality, decreased falls, and fewer medication errors. Purpose: To examine if there a negative correlation between patient falls and the level of nurse education at an urban hospital located in Midwest Illinois during the years 2010-2014? Methods: A retrospective crosssectional cohort analysis was conducted using data from the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators (NDNQI) from the years 2010-2014. Sample: Inpatients aged ≥ 18 years who experienced a unintentional sudden descent, with or without injury that resulted in the patient striking the floor or object and occurred on inpatient nursing units. Results: The regression model was constructed with annual patient falls as the dependent variable and formal education and a log transformed variable for percentage of certified nurses as the independent variables. The model overall is a good fit, F (2,22) = 9.014, p = .001, adj. R2 = .40. Conclusion: Annual patient falls will decrease by increasing the number of nurses with baccalaureate degrees and/or certifications from a professional nursing board-governing body
The dimensions of personality in humans and other animals: A comparative and evolutionary perspective
This paper considers the structure and proximate mechanisms of personality in humans and other animals. Significant similarities were found between personality structures and mechanisms across species in at least two broad traits: Extraversion and Neuroticism. The factor space tapped by these personality dimensions is viewed as a general integrative framework for comparative and evolutionary studies of personality in humans and other animals. Most probably, the cross-species similarities between the most broad personality dimensions like Extraversion and Neuroticism as well as other Big Five factors reflect conservative evolution: constrains on evolution imposed by physiological, genetic and cognitive mechanisms. Lower-order factors, which are more species- and situation-specific, would be adaptive, reflecting correlated selection on and trade-offs between many traits
The Economics and Psychology of Personality Traits
This paper explores the interface between personality psychology and economics. We examine the predictive power of personality and the stability of personality traits over the life cycle. We develop simple analytical frameworks for interpreting the evidence in personality psychology and suggest promising avenues for future research.personality traits, lifecycle effects, psychology, economics
The Economics and Psychology of Personality Traits
This paper explores the interface between personality psychology andeconomics. We examine the predictive power of personality and the stability ofpersonality traits over the life cycle. We develop simple analytical frameworksfor interpreting the evidence in personality psychology and suggest promisingavenues for future research.education, training and the labour market;
The Economics and Psychology of Personality Traits
This paper explores the interface between personality psychology and economics. We examine the predictive power of personality and the stability of personality traits over the life cycle. We develop simple analytical frameworks for interpreting the evidence in personality psychology and suggest promising avenues for future research.lifecycle effects, personality traits
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