Almotairi, Salah
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The Role of Nurse Engagement and Change Management in Improving Patient Outcomes: Evidence from Riyadh Health Clusters Almotairi, Salah; Ali, Dhakir Abbas; Said, Faridah Mohd; Aladhyani, Saleh Ishq
Genius Journal 2025: Article in Press
Publisher : Inspirasi Foundation

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Introduction: Riyadh’s healthcare reforms under Vision 2030 emphasize patient outcomes as key quality indicators. This study examines the underexplored interplay between nurse engagement and change management in shaping healthcare performance within Riyadh Health Clusters. Objective: This study aimed to examine the impact of nurse engagement and change management on patient outcomes within Riyadh Health Clusters. Methods: A quantitative research design was employed, involving 384 healthcare professionals from three clusters. Nurse engagement and change management were analyzed as independent variables, while patient outcomes served as the dependent variable. Data were processed using linear regression analysis in SPSS with a 5% significance threshold. Results: The findings demonstrated that nurse engagement strongly predicted patient outcomes (R = 0.72; R² = 0.71; β = 0.64; p < 0.05), showing that higher engagement levels significantly improved care quality. Change management practices also had a positive but more moderate effect on patient outcomes (R = 0.47; R² = 0.22; β = 0.45; p < 0.05). Conclusion: This study demonstrates that nurse engagement is a strong predictor of patient outcomes, while change management also contributes positively, though to a lesser extent. The findings emphasize that investing in strategies to enhance nurse engagement, such as professional development, participatory decision-making, and supportive leadership, is critical to improving the quality of care. At the same time, structured change management remains essential to sustain organizational adaptation and innovation in healthcare delivery. Together, these insights highlight the importance of integrating workforce-centered initiatives with system-level reforms to strengthen patient-centered outcomes within Riyadh Health Clusters and beyond.
Optimizing Nurse Staffing: The Impact of Nurse-to-Patient Ratios and Empowerment on Patient Satisfaction in Riyadh Health Clusters Aladhyani, Saleh Ishq; Ali, Dhakir Abbas; Said, Faridah Mohd; Almotairi, Salah
Genius Journal 2025: Article in Press
Publisher : Inspirasi Foundation

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Introduction: Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 has transformed healthcare delivery through the Riyadh Health Clusters, integrating hospitals and primary care centers to improve efficiency and patient outcomes. Within this context, nurse-to-patient ratios and employee empowerment have emerged as critical factors influencing patient satisfaction but remain underexplored in the Saudi healthcare system. Objective: This study examines the impact of nurse-to-patient ratios and employee empowerment on patient satisfaction within Riyadh Health Clusters, a transformative healthcare model under Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030. Methods: Using a quantitative, cross-sectional design, data were collected from 384 healthcare professionals, predominantly nurses, across three clusters. Results: Linear regression analyses revealed a statistically significant but modest positive relationship between nurse-to-patient ratios and employee empowerment (β = 0.18, R² = 0.04, p < 0.05), underscoring the limited explanatory role of staffing adequacy in isolation. In contrast, employee empowerment demonstrated a robust impact on patient satisfaction (β = 0.45, R² = 0.56, p < 0.001), highlighting its centrality to care quality. The findings align with Kanter’s Structural Empowerment Theory but diverge from Western models due to Riyadh’s unique challenges, including hierarchical organizational cultures, a predominantly expatriate nursing workforce (70%), and urban-rural resource disparities. Conclusion: The study emphasizes the need for context-specific strategies that integrate staffing reforms with empowerment initiatives, such as leadership training and participatory decision-making, to mitigate workforce burnout and standardize care practices. These insights advance global healthcare literature by contextualizing empowerment dynamics in non-Western settings and offer actionable recommendations for policymakers to align Riyadh’s cluster model with Vision 2030’s patient-centered goals.