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Organisational culture and staff outcomes in services for people with intellectual disabilities.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

Published

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Organisational culture and staff outcomes in services for people with intellectual disabilities. / Hatton, Chris; Rivers, M.; Mason, L. et al.
In: Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, Vol. 43, No. 3, 06.1999, p. 206-218.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

Harvard

Hatton, C, Rivers, M, Mason, L, Mason, E, Emerson, E, Kiernan, C, Reeves, D & Alborz, A 1999, 'Organisational culture and staff outcomes in services for people with intellectual disabilities.', Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 206-218. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2788.1999.00190.x

APA

Hatton, C., Rivers, M., Mason, L., Mason, E., Emerson, E., Kiernan, C., Reeves, D., & Alborz, A. (1999). Organisational culture and staff outcomes in services for people with intellectual disabilities. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 43(3), 206-218. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2788.1999.00190.x

Vancouver

Hatton C, Rivers M, Mason L, Mason E, Emerson E, Kiernan C et al. Organisational culture and staff outcomes in services for people with intellectual disabilities. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research. 1999 Jun;43(3):206-218. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2788.1999.00190.x

Author

Hatton, Chris ; Rivers, M. ; Mason, L. et al. / Organisational culture and staff outcomes in services for people with intellectual disabilities. In: Journal of Intellectual Disability Research. 1999 ; Vol. 43, No. 3. pp. 206-218.

Bibtex

@article{5870710fd70b41f9a4eb317bf0bccb4c,
title = "Organisational culture and staff outcomes in services for people with intellectual disabilities.",
abstract = "Organizational culture has been shown by organizational psychology to influence important aspects of staff behaviour. In particular, mismatches between staff perceptions of real and ideal organizational cultures have been shown to be associated with a range of negative outcomes for staff, such as stress, sickness and staff turnover. The present study investigates organizational culture in services for people with intellectual disabilities. The aim was to discover the prevalent organizational cultures in these services, and associations between organizational culture and staff outcomes. As part of a large-scale survey of staff in services for people with intellectual disabilities, information concerning organizational culture and staff outcomes was collected from 450 staff. A self-report measure of real and ideal organizational culture produced nine dimensions of organizational culture: (1) tolerant/staff-oriented; (2) achievement-oriented; (3) innovative; (4) analytical; (5) social relationships; (6) rewarding staff; (7) stable work environment; (8) demanding; and (9) conflict management. These nine dimensions of organizational culture showed generally adequate psychometric properties. While there was some variation in organizational culture across services, there is little variation across staff with different job titles. Overall, the staff rated real organizational cultures to be relatively high in achievement orientation and fostering social relationships, and relatively low in managing conflict and providing rewards for staff. Staff rated ideal organizational cultures to be high in rewarding staff, being tolerant/staff-oriented and fostering social relationships, and low in demands on staff. Except for the dimension of making demands on staff, where staff rated organizations as considerably higher than ideal, staff generally rated organizations as being less than ideal on all dimensions of organizational culture. Organizational psychology theory predicts that poor 'person–organization fit' (i.e. a greater mismatch between real and ideal organizational culture) will be associated with a range of negative staff outcomes. This theory was largely supported by findings of the present study. The implications for practice and for future research are discussed.",
keywords = "organizational culture • staff outcomes",
author = "Chris Hatton and M. Rivers and L. Mason and E. Mason and Eric Emerson and C. Kiernan and D. Reeves and A. Alborz",
year = "1999",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1046/j.1365-2788.1999.00190.x",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "206--218",
journal = "Journal of Intellectual Disability Research",
issn = "1365-2788",
publisher = "Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Organisational culture and staff outcomes in services for people with intellectual disabilities.

AU - Hatton, Chris

AU - Rivers, M.

AU - Mason, L.

AU - Mason, E.

AU - Emerson, Eric

AU - Kiernan, C.

AU - Reeves, D.

AU - Alborz, A.

PY - 1999/6

Y1 - 1999/6

N2 - Organizational culture has been shown by organizational psychology to influence important aspects of staff behaviour. In particular, mismatches between staff perceptions of real and ideal organizational cultures have been shown to be associated with a range of negative outcomes for staff, such as stress, sickness and staff turnover. The present study investigates organizational culture in services for people with intellectual disabilities. The aim was to discover the prevalent organizational cultures in these services, and associations between organizational culture and staff outcomes. As part of a large-scale survey of staff in services for people with intellectual disabilities, information concerning organizational culture and staff outcomes was collected from 450 staff. A self-report measure of real and ideal organizational culture produced nine dimensions of organizational culture: (1) tolerant/staff-oriented; (2) achievement-oriented; (3) innovative; (4) analytical; (5) social relationships; (6) rewarding staff; (7) stable work environment; (8) demanding; and (9) conflict management. These nine dimensions of organizational culture showed generally adequate psychometric properties. While there was some variation in organizational culture across services, there is little variation across staff with different job titles. Overall, the staff rated real organizational cultures to be relatively high in achievement orientation and fostering social relationships, and relatively low in managing conflict and providing rewards for staff. Staff rated ideal organizational cultures to be high in rewarding staff, being tolerant/staff-oriented and fostering social relationships, and low in demands on staff. Except for the dimension of making demands on staff, where staff rated organizations as considerably higher than ideal, staff generally rated organizations as being less than ideal on all dimensions of organizational culture. Organizational psychology theory predicts that poor 'person–organization fit' (i.e. a greater mismatch between real and ideal organizational culture) will be associated with a range of negative staff outcomes. This theory was largely supported by findings of the present study. The implications for practice and for future research are discussed.

AB - Organizational culture has been shown by organizational psychology to influence important aspects of staff behaviour. In particular, mismatches between staff perceptions of real and ideal organizational cultures have been shown to be associated with a range of negative outcomes for staff, such as stress, sickness and staff turnover. The present study investigates organizational culture in services for people with intellectual disabilities. The aim was to discover the prevalent organizational cultures in these services, and associations between organizational culture and staff outcomes. As part of a large-scale survey of staff in services for people with intellectual disabilities, information concerning organizational culture and staff outcomes was collected from 450 staff. A self-report measure of real and ideal organizational culture produced nine dimensions of organizational culture: (1) tolerant/staff-oriented; (2) achievement-oriented; (3) innovative; (4) analytical; (5) social relationships; (6) rewarding staff; (7) stable work environment; (8) demanding; and (9) conflict management. These nine dimensions of organizational culture showed generally adequate psychometric properties. While there was some variation in organizational culture across services, there is little variation across staff with different job titles. Overall, the staff rated real organizational cultures to be relatively high in achievement orientation and fostering social relationships, and relatively low in managing conflict and providing rewards for staff. Staff rated ideal organizational cultures to be high in rewarding staff, being tolerant/staff-oriented and fostering social relationships, and low in demands on staff. Except for the dimension of making demands on staff, where staff rated organizations as considerably higher than ideal, staff generally rated organizations as being less than ideal on all dimensions of organizational culture. Organizational psychology theory predicts that poor 'person–organization fit' (i.e. a greater mismatch between real and ideal organizational culture) will be associated with a range of negative staff outcomes. This theory was largely supported by findings of the present study. The implications for practice and for future research are discussed.

KW - organizational culture • staff outcomes

U2 - 10.1046/j.1365-2788.1999.00190.x

DO - 10.1046/j.1365-2788.1999.00190.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 43

SP - 206

EP - 218

JO - Journal of Intellectual Disability Research

JF - Journal of Intellectual Disability Research

SN - 1365-2788

IS - 3

ER -