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The work-based predictors of job engagement and job satisfaction experienced by community health professionals

journal contribution
posted on 2017-01-01, 00:00 authored by Andrew NobletAndrew Noblet, Amanda Allisey, Ingrid Nielsen, Stacey Cotton, Tony LaMontagneTony LaMontagne, Karen Page
Background: Job engagement represents a critical resource for community-based health care agencies to achieve high levels of effectiveness. However, studies examining the organisational sources of job engagement among health care professionals have generally overlooked those workers based in community settings.
Purpose: This study drew on the demand-control model, in addition to stressors that are more specific to community health services (e.g., unrewarding management practices), to identify conditions that are closely associated with the engagement experienced by a community health workforce. Job satisfaction was also included as a way of assessing how the predictors of job engagement differ from those associated with other job attitudes.
Methodology/Approach: Health and allied health care professionals (n = 516) from two
Australian community health services took part in the current investigation. Responses from the two organisations were pooled and analysed using linear multiple regression.
Findings: The analyses revealed that three working conditions were predictive of both job engagement and job satisfaction (i.e., job control, quantitative demands and unrewarding management practices). There was some evidence of differential effects with cognitive demands being associated with job engagement, but not job satisfaction.
Practice Implications: The results provide important insights into the working conditions that, if addressed, could play key roles in building a more engaged and satisfied community health workforce. Further, working conditions like job control and management practices are amenable to change and thus represent important areas where community health services could enhance the energetic and motivational resources of their employees.

History

Journal

Health care management review

Volume

42

Issue

3

Pagination

237 - 246

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

ISSN

1550-5030

eISSN

1550-5030

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.