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Journal ArticleDOI

Job and career satisfaction and turnover intentions of newly graduated nurses.

TLDR
Modifiable workplace factors play an important role in influencing new graduates' job and career satisfaction and turnover intentions and managers can employ strategies to enhance quality work environments that promote retention of new graduates and lessen the nursing workforce shortage.
Abstract
laschinger h.k.s. (2012) Journal of Nursing Management 20, 472–484 Job and career satisfaction and turnover intentions of newly graduated nurses Aim  To describe new graduate nurses’ worklife experiences in Ontario hospital settings in the first 2 years of practice and to examine predictors of job and career satisfaction and turnover intentions. Background  With a large cohort of nurses approaching retirement, every effort must be made to ensure that the work environments of new graduate nurses are positive, promoting job satisfaction and commitment to the profession to address the nursing workforce shortage. Method  A cross-sectional analysis of data from a mail survey of new graduate nurses (n = 342) in their first and second year of experience was used to address the research objectives. Results  Overall, new graduate nurses were positive about their working conditions and there were few differences between nurses in their first and second years of practice. Structural and personal factors explained significant amounts of variance (31–68%) in both job and career satisfaction and turnover intentions. Empowerment, work engagement and burnout were important significant predictors. Conclusions  Modifiable workplace factors play an important role in influencing new graduates’ job and career satisfaction and turnover intentions. Implications for nursing management  Managers can employ strategies to enhance quality work environments that promote retention of new graduates and lessen the nursing workforce shortage.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of transformational leadership on job satisfaction and patient safety outcomes

TL;DR: The findings provide support for managers' use of transformational leadership behaviors as a useful strategy in creating workplace conditions that promote better safety outcomes for patients and nurses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Burnout in nursing: a theoretical review

TL;DR: The patterns identified by these studies consistently show that adverse job characteristics—high workload, low staffing levels, long shifts, and low control—are associated with burnout in nursing, and the potential consequences for staff and patients are severe.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of job satisfaction, work engagement, self-efficacy and agentic capacities on nurses' turnover intention and patient satisfaction

TL;DR: The importance of implementing actions to improve self-efficacy, self-regulation skill, work engagement and job satisfaction in order to reduce nurses' turnover intention and increase patient satisfaction with nursing care is highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of areas of worklife fit and work-life interference on burnout and turnover intentions among new graduate nurses.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that new graduate nurses' turnover intentions are a recurring problem, which could be reduced by improving nurses' working conditions and, thereby, lessen the nursing shortage.
References
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Book

Mail and internet surveys : the tailored design method

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of the design of web, mail, and mixed-mode surveys, and present a survey implementation approach for web-based and mail-based surveys.

Mail and internet surveys: The tailored design method, 2nd ed.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the design of web, mail, and mixed-mode surveys, and present a survey implementation approach for web-based and mail-based surveys.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Measurement of Engagement and Burnout: A Two Sample Confirmatory Factor Analytic Approach

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the factorial structure of a new instrument to measure engagement, the hypothesized 'opposite' of burnout in a sample of university students (N=314) and employees (N = 619).
Journal ArticleDOI

Job demands, job resources, and their relationship with burnout and engagement: a multi‐sample study

TL;DR: In this paper, a model is tested in which burnout and engagement have different predictors and different possible consequences, showing that burnout is mainly predicted by job demands but also by lack of job resources, whereas engagement is exclusively predicted by available job resources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of the Job Diagnostic Survey

TL;DR: The Job Diagnostic Survey (JDS) as discussed by the authors was developed to diagnose existing jobs to determine if (and how) they might be redesigned to improve employee motivation and productivity, and to evaluate the effects of job changes on employees.
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