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Job satisfaction and turnover intent of primary healthcare nurses in rural South Africa: a questionnaire survey
Author(s) -
Delobelle Peter,
Rawlinson Jakes L.,
Ntuli Sam,
Malatsi Inah,
Decock Rika,
Depoorter Anne Marie
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2010.05496.x
Subject(s) - job satisfaction , nursing , medicine , turnover , health care , family medicine , psychology , social psychology , management , economics , economic growth
delobelle p., rawlinson j.l., ntuli s., malatsi i., decock r. & depoorter a.m. (2011)  Job satisfaction and turnover intent of primary healthcare nurses in rural South Africa: a questionnaire survey. Journal of Advanced Nursing   67 (2), 371–383. Abstract Aim.  This paper is a report of a correlational study of the relationships between demographic variables, job satisfaction, and turnover intent among primary healthcare nurses in a rural area of South Africa. Background.  Health systems in Southern Africa face a nursing shortage fuelled by migration, but research on job satisfaction and turnover intent of primary healthcare nurses remains poorly described. Method.  A cross‐sectional study with survey design was conducted in 2005 in all local primary healthcare clinics, including nurses on duty at the time of visit ( n  =   143). Scale development, anova , Spearman’s rank correlation, and logistic regression were applied. Results.  Nurses reported satisfaction with work content and coworker relationships and dissatisfaction with pay and work conditions. Half of all nurses considered turnover within two years, of whom three in ten considered moving overseas. Job satisfaction was statistically significantly associated with unit tenure ( P  <   0·05), professional rank ( P  <   0·01) and turnover intent ( P  <   0·01). Turnover intent was statistically significantly explained by job satisfaction, age and education ( P  <   0·001), with younger and higher educated nurses being more likely to show turnover intent. Satisfaction with supervision was the only facet significantly explaining turnover intent when controlling for age, education, years of nursing and unit tenure ( P  <   0·001). Conclusion.  Strategies aimed at improving job satisfaction and retention of primary healthcare nurses in rural South Africa should rely not only on financial rewards and improved work conditions but also on adequate human resource management.

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