Abstract

BackgroundJob satisfaction of staff is an essential outcome variable in research when describing the work environment of successful hospitals. Numerous studies have evaluated the topic, but few previous studies have assessed the job satisfaction of all staff in hospital settings. It is important to discover if there are any unsatisfied groups of people working in hospitals, the aspects they are unsatisfied with and why. The aim of this study was to evaluate job satisfaction of all staff working at a Finnish university hospital, identify differences in job satisfaction between staff groups, and explore the relationship between their self-evaluated quality of work and job satisfaction.MethodsData were collected from 1424 employees of the hospital using the web-based Kuopio University Job Satisfaction Scale survey instrument in autumn 2010. The research data were analysed by using SPSS 19.0 for Windows. Frequency and percentage distributions, as well as mean values, were used to describe the data. A non-parametric test (Kruskal–Wallis test) was used to determine the significance of differences in scores between different groups of staff members and between quality evaluations.ResultsThe overall job satisfaction of the employees was good. They rated both motivating factors of their work and work welfare as excellent. The areas causing most dissatisfaction were work demands and participation in decision making. Physicians formed the most satisfied group, nurses and maintenance staff were the least satisfied, and office and administrative staff were fairly satisfied. Staff who rated the quality of work in their units as high usually also considered their job satisfaction to be excellent.ConclusionsEvery staff member has an influence on job satisfaction in her/his unit. A culture of participation should be developed and maintained in the units and the whole hospital to ensure that all staff feel they play important roles in the hospital. A university hospital is a complex, continuously changing work environment. Managers of the hospital should continuously evaluate job satisfaction and quickly react to the results gained.

Highlights

  • Job satisfaction of staff is an essential outcome variable in research when describing the work environment of successful hospitals

  • Job satisfaction of staff is an essential outcome variable in research describing the work environment of successful hospitals, and it has been evaluated in numerous studies

  • Participants and data collection Data were collected by a cross-sectional survey of all staff in one university hospital in the autumn of 2010, using the Kuopio University Hospital Job Satisfaction Scale (KUHJSS) instrument, developed as part of the At Safe project [23]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Job satisfaction of staff is an essential outcome variable in research when describing the work environment of successful hospitals. Numerous studies have evaluated the topic, but few previous studies have assessed the job satisfaction of all staff in hospital settings. Job satisfaction of staff is an essential outcome variable in research describing the work environment of successful hospitals, and it has been evaluated in numerous studies. Several studies have focused on the job satisfaction of nursing staff, and provided evidence (inter alia) that it is a important success factor and quality outcome of Magnet hospitals. Few previous studies have assessed the job satisfaction of all staff in the hospitals [5,11].

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call