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Assimilating to Hierarchical Culture: A Grounded Theory Study on Communication among Clinical Nurses

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  • MinYoung Kim
  • Seieun Oh

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to generate a substantive model that accounts for the explanatory social processes of communication in which nurses were engaged in clinical settings in Korea. Grounded theory methodology was used in this study. A total of 15 clinical nurses participated in the in-depth interviews. “Assimilating to the hierarchical culture” emerged as the basic social process of communication in which the participants engaged in their work environments. To adapt to the cultures of their assigned wards, the nurses learned to be silent and engaged in their assimilation into the established hierarchy. The process of assimilation consisted of three phases based on the major goals that nurses worked to achieve: getting to know about unspoken rules, persevering within the culture, and acting as senior nurse. Seven strategies and actions utilized to achieve the major tasks emerged as subcategories, including receiving strong disapproval, learning by observing, going silent, finding out what is acceptable, minimizing distress, taking advantages as senior nurse, and taking responsibilities as senior nurse. The findings identified how the pattern of communication in nursing organizations affected the way in which nurses were assimilated into organizational culture, from individual nurses’ perspectives. In order to improve the rigid working atmosphere and culture in nursing organizations and increase members’ satisfaction with work and quality of life, managers and staff nurses need training that focuses on effective communication and encouraging peer opinion-sharing within horizontal relationships. Moreover, organization-level support should be provided to create an environment that encourages free expression.

Suggested Citation

  • MinYoung Kim & Seieun Oh, 2016. "Assimilating to Hierarchical Culture: A Grounded Theory Study on Communication among Clinical Nurses," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(6), pages 1-18, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0156305
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156305
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