| Literature DB >> 22909352 |
Cathrine Reineholm1, Maria Gustavsson, Mats Liljegren, Kerstin Ekberg.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Changing jobs is part of modern working life. Within occupational health, job mobility has mainly been studied in terms of employees' intentions to leave their jobs. In contrast to actual turnover, turnover intentions are not definite and only reflect the probability that an individual will change job. The aim of this study was to determine what work conditions predict voluntary job mobility and to examine if good health or burnout predicts voluntary job mobility.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22909352 PMCID: PMC3505749 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Descriptive statistics for voluntary job mobility between baseline and the two-year follow-up distributed among sex, age, education level, civil status, and having children living at home ( = 1010)
| Sex | Women | 521 (60) | 72 (59) | .87 |
| | Men | 351 (40) | 50 (41) | |
| Age | Under 35years | 76 (9) | 21 (17) | <.001 |
| | 35–44years | 194 (22) | 39 (32) | |
| | 45–54years | 308 (35) | 34 (28) | |
| | 55years and older | 294 (34) | 28 (23) | |
| Education | 9-years compulsory school | 64 (8) | 10 (11) | .07 |
| | 2years upper secondary school | 174 (22) | 17 (18) | |
| | 3/4years upper secondary school | 168 (22) | 17 (18) | |
| | University | 358 (46) | 45 (47) | |
| | Other | 15 (2) | 6 (6) | |
| Civil status | Single | 115 (17) | 18 (21) | .53 |
| | Cohabitee/married | 538 (80) | 69 (78) | |
| | Other | 20 (3) | 1 (1) | |
| Children | No | 353 (53) | 50 (57) | .49 |
| Yes | 314 (47) | 38 (43) |
Descriptive statistics (means and standard deviations) and results of-test for work conditions and health distributed among non-mobile and mobile
| | | | |
| Variety | 3.35 (0.67) | 3.26 (0.72) | .24 |
| Autonomy | 3.69 (0.57) | 3.83 (0.59) | .03 |
| Feedback | 2.78 (0.73) | 2.84 (0.80) | .54 |
| Task identity | 3.70 (0.75) | 3.84 (0.67) | .09 |
| | | | |
| Vitality | 59.2 (23.1) | 60.4 (21.9) | .66 |
| VAS | 73.3 (18.6) | 74.3 (18.6) | .64 |
| Burnout | 44.1 (19.2) | 44.8 (18.5) | .71 |
Associations between work conditions, health, burnout at baseline, and voluntary job mobility at follow-up (OR,-value and 95% CI), controlled for sex, age, education, civil status and having children living at home
| | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | ||||
| Variety | 0.82 | .24 | 0.59–1.14 | 0.62 | .02 | 0.42–0.91 | 0.63 | .02 | 0.42–0.94 |
| Autonomy | 1.55 | .03 | 1.04–2.33 | 1.71 | .05 | 1.00–2.89 | 1.79 | .04 | 1.03–3.09 |
| Feedback | 1.10 | .53 | 0.81–1.50 | 1.07 | .69 | 0.76–1.51 | 1.22 | .29 | 0.85–1.75 |
| Task identity | 1.32 | .09 | 0.96–1.82 | 1.21 | .36 | 0.83–1.82 | 1.21 | .38 | 0.79–1.84 |
| | | | | | | | | ||
| Vitality | 1.00 | .66 | 0.99–1.01 | | | | 1.01 | .46 | 0.99–1.03 |
| VAS | 1.00 | .64 | 0.99–1.02 | | | | 1.01 | .42 | 0.99–1.03 |
| Burnout | 1.00 | .71 | 0.99–1.01 | 1.02 | .07 | 1.00–1.04 | |||
aCrude OR.
bModel 1: work condition variables, adjusted for each other.
cModel 2: Model 1 adjusted for health and burnout variables.