...
首页> 外文期刊>Rural and Remote Health >An explanation of turnover intention among early-career nursing and allied health professionals working in rural and remote Australia – findings from a grounded theory study AUTHORS
【24h】

An explanation of turnover intention among early-career nursing and allied health professionals working in rural and remote Australia – findings from a grounded theory study AUTHORS

机译:在澳大利亚农村和偏远地区工作的早期护理和相关医疗专业人员的离职意图的解释-扎根理论研究的结果

获取原文
           

摘要

Introduction: Rural health workforce shortages are a global phenomenon. Countries like Australia, with industrialised economies, large land masses and broadly dispersed populations, face unique rural health challenges in providing adequate services and addressing workforce shortages. This article focuses on retention of early-career nursing and allied health professionals working in rural and remote Australia. Some of Australia’s most severe and protracted rural workforce shortages, particularly among early-career health professionals, are in public sector community mental health (CMH), a multidisciplinary workforce staffed primarily by nurses and allied health professionals. This study investigated how employment and rural-living factors impacted the turnover intention of early-career, rural-based CMH professionals in their first few years of working. Methods: A constructivist grounded theory methodological approach, primarily guided by the work of Charmaz, was selected for the study. By implication, the choice of a grounded theory approach meant that the research question would be answered through the development of a substantive theory. Twenty-six nursing and allied health professionals working in CMH in rural New South Wales (NSW) for the state health department services participated in in-depth, semi-structured interviews. The study sought to identify the particular life factors – workplace conditions, career-advancement opportunities and social and personal determinants – affecting workers’ turnover intention. The substantive grounded theory was developed from an identified core category and basic social process. Results: The turnover intention theory provides a whole-of-person explanation of turnover intention. It was developed based on an identified core category of professional and personal expectations being met and an identified basic social process of adjusting to change. The theory posits that an individual’s decision to stay or leave their job is determined by the meeting of life aspirations, and this relates to the extent of the gap between individuals’ professional and personal expectations and the reality of their current employment and rural-living experience. The extent of individuals’ professional and personal expectations can be measured by their satisfaction levels. A major finding from the identification of the basic social process was that, in the adjustment stages (initial and continuing), turnover intention was most strongly affected by professional experiences, in particular those relating to the job role, workplace relationships and level of access to continuing professional development. In this stage, personal satisfaction mostly concerned those with limited social connections in the town (ie non-local – newcomers). Having reached the ‘having adapted’ stage, the major influence on turnover intention shifted to personal satisfaction, and this was strongly impacted by individuals’ life stage. By drawing on the turnover intention theory and the basic social process, it is possible to make a risk assessment of individuals’ turnover intention. Three levels of risk were identified: highly vulnerable, moderately vulnerable and not very vulnerable. Conclusions: The study offers a holistic explanation of life factors influencing the turnover intention of early-career health professionals working in public health services in rural NSW. These findings and the turnover intention risk matrix are thought to be suitable for use by Australian public health services and governments, as well as in other highly industrialised countries, to assist in the development of policies and strategies tailored for individual health professionals’ work-experience level and life stage. By adopting such a whole-of-person approach, health services and governments will be better positioned to address the life aspirations of rural-based, early-career health professionals and this is likely to assist in the reduction of avoidable turnover.
机译:简介:农村卫生人力短缺是全球现象。像澳大利亚这样的国家,拥有工业化的经济,大量的土地和广泛分布的人口,在提供适当服务和解决劳动力短缺方面面临独特的农村健康挑战。本文的重点是保留在澳大利亚农村和偏远地区工作的早期护理和专职医疗专业人员。澳大利亚一些最严重,最持久的农村劳动力短缺,特别是在早期职业卫生专业人员中,是公共部门社区精神卫生(CMH),这是一个多学科的劳动力队伍,主要由护士和专职卫生专业人员组成。这项研究调查了就业和农村生活因素如何影响以农村为基础的早期职业的CMH专业人士在其工作​​的头几年中的离职意图。方法:选择以建构主义为基础的理论方法论方法为主要研究对象,该方法学主要以Charmaz的工作为指导。言外之意,选择扎根的理论方法意味着该研究问题将通过实质性理论的发展得到解答。在新南威尔士州农村(CMW)为州卫生部门服务的CMH工作的26名护理和专职卫生专业人员参加了深入,半结构化的访谈。该研究试图确定影响工作人员离职意愿的特殊生活因素-工作场所条件,职业发展机会以及社会和个人决定因素。实质性扎根理论是从已确定的核心类别和基本社会过程发展而来的。结果:离职意向理论提供了对离职意向的全人解释。它是根据已确定的满足职业和个人期望的核心类别以及已确定的适应变化的基本社会过程而开发的。该理论认为,个人决定留下或离开工作取决于生活愿望的满足,这与个人的职业期望和个人期望之间的差距程度以及他们当前的工作和农村生活经验的现实有关。 。个人的专业和个人期望程度可以通过其满意度来衡量。从基本社会过程的识别中得出的主要发现是,在调整阶段(初始和持续)中,离职意向受专业经验的影响最大,特别是与工作角色,工作场所关系和获得机会的水平有关的经验。持续的专业发展。在此阶段,个人满意度主要涉及城镇中社交关系有限的人(即非本地人-新移民)。进入“适应”阶段后,对离职意图的主要影响转移到了个人满意度,这受到个人生活阶段的强烈影响。通过运用离职意图理论和基本的社会过程,可以对个人的离职意图进行风险评估。确定了三个风险级别:高度脆弱,中等脆弱和不太脆弱。结论:该研究为影响新南威尔士州农村地区公共卫生服务早期职业卫生专业人员离职意愿的生活因素提供了全面的解释。这些发现和离职意向风险矩阵被认为适合澳大利亚公共卫生服务和政府以及其他高度工业化国家使用,以帮助制定针对个人卫生专业人员工作经验的政策和策略。水平和生命阶段。通过采用这种全人参与的方法,卫生服务和政府部门将可以更好地满足农村早期职业卫生专业人员的生活需求,这很可能有助于减少可避免的人员流动。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号