Abstract

ObjectiveTo demonstrate the application of Rasch analysis in the study of job satisfaction among practicing pharmacists. DesignCross-sectional survey study. SettingCommunity independent, community chain, hospital, and other pharmacies in the United States in fall 2005. Participants790 practicing pharmacists. InterventionMailed survey based on past studies of job satisfaction. Main outcome measureJob satisfaction as measured using the Rasch rating scale model (which considers responses on Likert scales as categorical data) and traditional estimation techniques (which assume a continuum among responses on these scales by analyzing data as interval). ResultsA gain in precision for the Rasch technique was observed for the constructs distributive justice, job autonomy, job ambiguity, role conflict, positive affectiv- ity, job resources, and supervisory support. No gain in precision was found for the constructs negative affectivity and work involvement. Traditional estimates offered more precision for the constructs job repetition, promotional opportunity, and workload. ConclusionCompared with traditional estimates, Rasch estimates provided more precise scores of job satisfaction on certain subscales, especially those whose mean scores were large or responses more diverse.

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