Abstract

BackgroundHealth services organizations must understand how best to lower nursing professionals’ turnover intentions, and increase their job satisfaction and the quality of care provided to patients. This study aims to examine whether work engagement (WE) is a significant predictor of the achievement of these preferred organizational goals. The study also aims to examine whether organizational culture and organizational climate can manage the WE of nursing professionals and indirectly contribute to the accomplishment of the preferred organizational goals.MethodsIn detail, a cross-sectional questionnaire survey study was conducted through a convenience sampling of a total of N = 164 nurses, from four Norwegian public hospitals. Structural equation modeling was employed in testing the hypothesis in the conceptual model, using Stata software. Furthermore, mediation analyses were achieved through use of the “medsem” package in the Stata software, in testing whether the proposed direct and indirect effects were statistically significant, and the type of mediation found.ResultsThe three key findings from this study are: i) WE of nursing professionals was found to be positively related to service quality of care (β = 0.551) and job satisfaction (β = 0.883). Job satisfaction fully mediates the relationship between WE and turnover intention and in itself explains almost 60% (R2 = 0.59) of turnover intention; ii) nursing professionals’ perception of organizational culture (β = 0.278) and collaboration climate (β = 0.331) were both directly related to their WE; and iii) WE fully mediates the relationship between organizational culture/climate and service quality of care and job satisfaction. Moreover, WE partially mediates the relationship between collaborative climate and job satisfaction.ConclusionsThe WE of nursing professionals is highly correlated to their job satisfaction. WE and turnover intentions are (fully) mediated by job satisfaction. Employers should therefore focus on improving the job satisfaction of nursing professionals. The WE of nursing professionals is a common key factor for such improvement. Consequently, leaders and managers should continuously manage nursing professionals’ WE, focusing on such areas as organizational culture and climate, because WE is an effective means of enabling multiple desirable outcomes for hospital organizations.

Highlights

  • Health services organizations must understand how best to lower nursing professionals’ turnover intentions, and increase their job satisfaction and the quality of care provided to patients

  • It has become essential for hospital organizations to identify factors that have the potential to contribute positively to achieving desired organizational goals, such as lowering turnover intentions among nurses as well as being able to increase their job satisfaction and level of service quality provided to patients

  • This study aims to examine whether the work engagement (WE) of nursing professionals has the potential to function as a core factor in the achievement of multiple desirable outcomes for hospital organizations

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Summary

Introduction

Health services organizations must understand how best to lower nursing professionals’ turnover intentions, and increase their job satisfaction and the quality of care provided to patients. It has been demonstrated that healthcare organizations have experienced ongoing challenges of high turnover rates among nurses [3] Such turnover has several negative impacts such as lower levels of service quality provided to patients [4], lower patient satisfaction [5], lower productivity [6], negative effect on morale and an increase in the level of turnover intentions [7]. It has become essential for hospital organizations to identify factors that have the potential to contribute positively to achieving desired organizational goals, such as lowering turnover intentions among nurses as well as being able to increase (or maintain) their job satisfaction and level of service quality provided to patients. As in Gupta et al, this study suggests work engagement (WE) as a positive key element in achieving organizational goal achievement [1]

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