Ya-Wen Lee1, Yu-Tzu Dai, Linda L McCreary. 1. Department of Nursing, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Changhua Christian Hospital, Changhua, Taiwan; Nursing Department, Changhua Christian Hospital, Changhua, Taiwan.
Abstract
AIM: To examine the relationships between quality of work life (QWL) and nurses' intention to leave their unit (ITLunit), organisation (ITLorg) and profession (ITLpro). BACKGROUND: The high turnover rate among nurses presents a major challenge to health care systems across the globe. QWL plays a significant role in nurses' turnover. METHODS: A descriptive cross-sectional survey design was conducted via purposive sampling of 1283 hospital nurses and administering the Chinese version of the Quality of Nursing Work Life scale (C-QNWL), a three-ITL-type scale questionnaire, and a demographic questionnaire for individual- and work-related variables. Descriptive data, correlations, and ordinal regression models were analyzed. RESULTS: QWL predicted ITLpro and ITLorg better than ITLunit. Three QWL dimensions (work arrangement and workload, nursing staffing and patient care, and work-home life balance) were significantly predictive of all three ITL measures. However, the dimension of teamwork and communication was only predictive for ITLunit, not for ITLorg and ITLpro. CONCLUSIONS: Different patterns of QWL dimensions are predictive of ITLunit, ITLorg, and ITLpro. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING MANAGEMENT: The study provides important information to nurse administrators about the aspects of QWL that most commonly lead nurses to leave their units, organisations, and even the profession itself.
AIM: To examine the relationships between quality of work life (QWL) and nurses' intention to leave their unit (ITLunit), organisation (ITLorg) and profession (ITLpro). BACKGROUND: The high turnover rate among nurses presents a major challenge to health care systems across the globe. QWL plays a significant role in nurses' turnover. METHODS: A descriptive cross-sectional survey design was conducted via purposive sampling of 1283 hospital nurses and administering the Chinese version of the Quality of Nursing Work Life scale (C-QNWL), a three-ITL-type scale questionnaire, and a demographic questionnaire for individual- and work-related variables. Descriptive data, correlations, and ordinal regression models were analyzed. RESULTS: QWL predicted ITLpro and ITLorg better than ITLunit. Three QWL dimensions (work arrangement and workload, nursing staffing and patient care, and work-home life balance) were significantly predictive of all three ITL measures. However, the dimension of teamwork and communication was only predictive for ITLunit, not for ITLorg and ITLpro. CONCLUSIONS: Different patterns of QWL dimensions are predictive of ITLunit, ITLorg, and ITLpro. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING MANAGEMENT: The study provides important information to nurse administrators about the aspects of QWL that most commonly lead nurses to leave their units, organisations, and even the profession itself.
Keywords:
intention to leave the organisation; intention to leave the profession; intention to leave the unit; nursing profession; nursing work environment; quality of work life
Authors: Haitham Khatatbeh; Annamária Pakai; Dorina Pusztai; Szilvia Szunomár; Noémi Fullér; Gyula Kovács Szebeni; Adrienn Siket; Miklós Zrínyi; András Oláh Journal: Nurs Open Date: 2020-12-04