| Literature DB >> 34363548 |
Luca Negri1, Sabina Cilia2,3, Monica Falautano4, Monica Grobberio5, Claudia Niccolai6, Marianna Pattini7, Erika Pietrolongo8, Maria Esmeralda Quartuccio9, Rosa Gemma Viterbo10, Beatrice Allegri7, Maria Pia Amato6,11, Miriam Benin5, Giovanna De Luca8, Claudio Gasperini9, Eleonora Minacapelli4, Francesco Patti2, Maria Trojano10, Marta Bassi12.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Health professionals caring for persons with multiple sclerosis (MS) are faced with increasingly complex working conditions that can undermine their job satisfaction and the quality of their healthcare services. The aim of this study was to delve into health professionals' job satisfaction by assessing the predictive role of happiness and meaning at work. Specifically, it was hypothesized that job meaning would moderate the relationship between job happiness and satisfaction.Entities:
Keywords: Healthcare professionals; Job happiness; Job meaning; Job satisfaction; Multiple sclerosis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34363548 PMCID: PMC8346783 DOI: 10.1007/s10072-021-05520-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Sci ISSN: 1590-1874 Impact factor: 3.307
Participants’ demographic and job characteristics
| Health professionals ( | Physicians ( | Nurses ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, | 42.46 (9.53) | 41.08 (9.74) | 43.80 (9.22) |
| Gender, | |||
| Women | 78 (72.2) | 35 (66.0) | 43 (78.2) |
| Men | 30 (27.8) | 18 (34.0) | 12 (21.8) |
| Civil status, | |||
| Single | 12 (11.1) | 8 (15.1) | 4 (7.3) |
| Married or cohabiting | 72 (66.7) | 36 (67.9) | 36 (65.5) |
| Engaged | 14 (13.0) | 6 (11.3) | 8 (14.5) |
| Separated/divorced | 8 (7.4) | 3 (5.7) | 5 (9.1) |
| Widowed | 2 (1.9) | - | 2 (3.6) |
| Job seniority (in years), | 17.17 (10.31) | 13.72 (9.30) | 20.49 (10.22) |
Descriptive statistics and correlations among study variables
| Health professionals | Physicians | Nurses | (1) | (2) | (3) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Job happiness | 5.20 | 1.00 | 4.87 | 0.92 | 5.53 | 0.98 | - | .16 | .45** |
| (2) Job meaning | 6.04 | 0.82 | 5.91 | 0.84 | 6.16 | 0.79 | .20 | - | .28* |
| (3) Job satisfaction | 7.55 | 1.28 | 7.58 | 1.20 | 7.51 | 1.36 | .56*** | .08 | - |
Note. Correlations for physicians are reported above the diagonal; correlations for nurses are reported below the diagonal
***p < .001; **p < .01; *p < .05
Hierarchical regression analysis for job satisfaction
| 95% CI | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SE | Lower | Upper | Δ | Δ | ||||
| Step 1 | 30.72 | .225 | .22*** | |||||
| Job happiness | .60** | .14 | .47 | .33 | .88 | |||
| Step 2 | .59 | .004 | .23 | |||||
| Job happiness | .59** | .14 | .46 | .31 | .86 | |||
| Job meaning | .11 | .13 | .07 | − .13 | .37 | |||
| Step 3 | 7.52 | .052 | .28** | |||||
| Job happiness | .64** | .13 | .50 | .38 | .90 | |||
| Job meaning | .06 | .12 | .04 | − .19 | .30 | |||
| Job happiness x meaning | − .37* | .15 | − .23 | − .64 | − .04 | |||
Note. B = regression coefficients; β = standardized regression coefficients. Standard Errors (SE), and confidence intervals (CI) were based on 1000 bootstrap samples
***p < .001; **p < .01; *p < .05
Fig. 1Interaction effect between job happiness and job meaning on job satisfaction