Factors associated with the quality of conflict management among anesthesia technicians
A. Ghenim, M. Kahloul, I. Kacem, A. Aloui, A. Chouchane, M. Ajmi, W. Naija, M. Maoua, N. Mrizak

TL;DR
This study explores factors affecting how anesthesia technicians manage conflicts in hospitals, finding that younger age, smoking, and fewer dependents are linked to poorer conflict management.
Contribution
The study identifies specific demographic and lifestyle factors associated with impaired conflict management among anesthesia technicians.
Findings
58% of participants reported frequent to very frequent conflicts in the hospital.
Lack of leadership was the main cause of conflict (60%), followed by unequal task distribution (42%).
Factors like age under 40, tobacco use, and fewer dependent children were linked to poor conflict management.
Abstract
A conflict arises when one or more individuals, groups or organizations disagree, creating internal or external tensions that can cause damage. This is particularly serious in operating theatres, where decisions involving life or death are common. Indeed, in this particular context, the multiplicity of stakeholders, the divergence of opinions and decisions related to patient care, the frequency of critical situations, stress and the limitation of resources are established causes of disagreement and tension. To identify factors associated with the alteration of conflict management quality among anesthesia and resuscitation technicians (ART). This is an observational, multicenter, cross-sectional and analytical study, enrolling all ART exercising at the two teaching hospitals of Sousse (Tunisia) over a two month period(March 1, 2022 to April 30, 2022). Conflict management was assessed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsConflict Management and Negotiation
