1. Predicting nurses' turnover intentions by demographic characteristics, perception of health, quality of work attitudes.
- Author
-
Al‐Hussami, Mahmoud, Darawad, Muhammad, Saleh, Ali, and Hayajneh, Ferial Ahmed
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,STATISTICAL correlation ,EMPLOYEES ,EXPERIENCE ,INCOME ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,LABOR turnover ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL quality control ,NURSES ,NURSES' attitudes ,NURSING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SELF-evaluation ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of demographic variables, organizational commitment levels, perception of health and quality of work on turnover intentions. A self-reported cross-sectional survey design was used to collect data from Jordanian registered nurses who were working between June 2011 and November 2011. The findings showed strong effects of the quality of work, perception of health and normative organizational commitments on turnover intentions. This study sheds the light on the important work outcomes in health-care organizations. Increasing nursing quality of work and normative organizational commitment are good strategies for reducing turnover intentions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF