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Leader-member exchange and organizational climate effects on clinician turnover intentions.

Authors :
Aarons GA
Conover KL
Ehrhart MG
Torres EM
Reeder K
Source :
Journal of health organization and management [J Health Organ Manag] 2020 Dec 01; Vol. 35 (1), pp. 68-87.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Purpose: Clinician turnover in mental health settings impacts service quality, including availability and delivery of evidence-based practices. Leadership is associated with organizational climate, team functioning and clinician turnover intentions (TI). This study examines leader-member exchange (LMX), reflecting the relationship between a supervisor and each supervisee, using mean team LMX, dispersion of individual clinician ratings compared to team members (i.e. relative LMX) and team level variability (i.e. LMX differentiation), in relation to organizational climate and clinician TI.<br />Design/methodology/approach: Survey data were collected from 363 clinicians, nested in children's mental health agency workgroups, providing county-contracted outpatient services to youth and families. A moderated mediation path analysis examined cross-level associations of leader-member exchange with organizational climate and turnover intentions.<br />Findings: Lower relative LMX and greater LMX differentiation were associated with higher clinician TI. Higher team-level demoralizing climate also predicted higher TI. These findings indicate that poorer LMX and more variability in LMX at the team level are related to clinician TI.<br />Originality/value: This study describes both team- and clinician-level factors on clinician TI. Few studies have examined LMX in mental health, and fewer still have examined relative LMX and LMX differentiation associations with organizational climate and TI. These findings highlight the importance of leader-follower relationships and organizational climate and their associations with clinician TIs. Mental health service systems and organizations can address these issues through fostering more positive supervisor-supervisee relationships.<br /> (© Emerald Publishing Limited.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1758-7247
Volume :
35
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of health organization and management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33543606
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1108/JHOM-10-2019-0311