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Seeking help in the shadow of doubt: The sensemaking processes underlying how nurses decide whom to ask for advice.
Authors:Hofmann, David A.   Lei, Zhike   Grant, Adam M.
Abstract:Although scholars often assume that individuals seek out experts when they need help, recent research suggests that seeking help from experts can be costly. The authors propose that perceiving potential help providers as accessible or trustworthy can reduce the costs of seeking help and thus encourage individuals to seek help from experts. They further predict that perceptions of potential help providers’ expertise, accessibility, and trustworthiness are shaped by their experience, formal roles, and organizational commitment. They investigated their theoretical model in a study of 146 nurses on the front lines of healthcare. They found that the decision to seek out help depends on help-seekers’ perceptions of experts’ accessibility and trustworthiness, and that these perceptions are predicted by experience, formal roles, and affective organizational commitment. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:help-seeking   sensemaking   role theory   error management   health care   help provider characteristics   trustworthiness   expertise   accessibility   help seeker perceptions   nurses
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