RESUMEN
PURPOSE: Healthcare organizations require more proactive behaviors from nursing professionals. However, nurse managers' proactivity has rarely been analyzed in the literature and little is known about the antecedents and consequences of their proactive behavior at work. This study examines the relationships between job characteristics (i.e. job autonomy and job variety), psychological empowerment, proactive work behavior and job effectiveness indicators (i.e. innovative work behavior, job performance). We tested a model in which psychological empowerment and proactive work behavior sequentially mediate the relationship between job characteristics and job effectiveness. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: A cross-sectional study was conducted among nurse middle managers from a French hospital (N = 321). A hypothetical model was developed based on existing theory. Structural equation modeling was used to test the hypotheses. FINDINGS: Results show that psychological empowerment and proactive work behavior fully mediate the relationship between job characteristics and innovative work behavior, and partially mediate the relationship between job characteristics and job performance. ORIGINALITY/VALUE: This study provides insights for understanding how job characteristics can contribute to fostering the proactivity of nurse middle managers and how their proactive work behavior can be positively related to innovative work behavior and job performance. Findings raise several implications for hospital administrators and upper management seeking new ways to enhance nurse middle managers' proactive work behavior and push further their effectiveness at work.
Asunto(s)
Enfermeras Administradoras , Rendimiento Laboral , Humanos , Estudios Transversales , Femenino , Masculino , Enfermeras Administradoras/psicología , Adulto , Persona de Mediana Edad , Francia , Encuestas y CuestionariosRESUMEN
Adipose tissue is an accessible and abundant source of mesenchymal stem cells for soft-tissue reconstruction. In an attempt to create a novel, entirely autologous tissue-engineered adipose substitute, we extracted human stromal cells from either lipoaspirated or resected fat, and assessed their capacity to produce a three-dimensional adipose tissue using an adapted "self-assembly" culture methodology. This strategy involved a concomitant induction of adipogenic differentiation whilst ascorbic acid supplementation stimulated the stromal cells to produce and organize their own "biomaterial" in the form of extracellular matrix, forming manipulatable sheets that are then assembled into thicker reconstructed adipose tissues. When compared to resected fat, lipoaspiration-derived cells featured an increased adipogenic potential and the enhanced ability to recreate an adipose substitute in vitro. When viewed by scanning electron microscopy, the appearance of these reconstructed adipose tissues was strikingly similar to subcutaneous fat. Furthermore, these substitutes secreted adipokines and mediated beta-adrenergic receptor-stimulated lipolysis, hence reproducing known major biological functions of white adipose tissue. Therefore, our cell-based tissue engineering strategy led to the production of a functional and entirely natural reconstructed adipose tissue, which offers the potential to be used for specific in vitro applications as well as for autologous soft-tissue reconstruction.