Title: Campus Scenes: University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada
1Campus Scenes University of Western
OntarioLondon, Ontario, Canada
2Individual and Contextual Predictors of Nurses
Job Satisfaction The Mediating Role of Burnout
Heather K. Spence Laschinger, RN,
PhD Distinguished University Professor and
Associate Director Nursing Research School of
Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences The
University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario,
Canada Email - hkl_at_uwo.ca Joan Finegan,
PhD Professor, Department of Psychology University
of Western Ontario, London, Ontario,
Canada Piotr Wilk, PhD Scientist Middlesex-London
Health Unit London, Ontario The 11th
International Conference on Social Stress
Research The La Fonda Hotel, Santa Fe, New
Mexico May 31 June 2, 2008 Funded by Social
Sciences Humanities Research Council of Canada
3Background and Rationale for Study
- Impending workforce shortage crisis as Baby
Boomers near retirement necessitates serious
attention to understanding factors that attract
and retain employees - The health care sector in Canada is particularly
at risk for labour shortages, notably in the
nursing profession (McMullin Cooke, 2004) - A third of nurses in a large international study
were dissatisfied with their jobs and reported
high levels of burnout, potentially worsening the
shortage (Aiken et al., 2001). - Employee empowerment an effective means of
counteracting the disempowering effects of
stressful working conditions and increasing
employee satisfaction and commitment (Kanter,
1989 Pfeffer, 1994 Spreitzer, 1995) - Leadership plays an important role in creating
empowering working conditions that prevent
burnout and promote retention of employees.
4Purpose
-
- To examine contextual and personal effects on
nurses job satisfaction. - To test a multi-level model derived from Kanters
work empowerment theory linking unit level
leadership and structural empowerment to
individual nurses experiences of burnout and job
satisfaction - To examine the role of a personal disposition
variable, core self evaluation, in the model.
5Structural Empowerment access to
organizational structures that enable employees
to accomplish their work in meaningful ways
(Kanter, 1979).
- Kanter (1977) describes four organizational
empowerment structures - Access to information
- Access to support
- Access to resources needed to do the job
- Opportunities to learn and grow.
- Access to these empowerment structures is
facilitated by - Formal power
- Informal power
6Expanded Work Empowerment Theory (Laschinger
Finegan, 2001)
7Structural Empowerment and Retention Factors
- Structural empowerment significant predictor of
-
- Job Satisfaction (Laschinger, et al, 2004
Manojlovich, 2005 Hatcher Laschinger, 1996). - Job Commitment (Laschinger, Finegan, Shamian,
2001 Young-Ritchie, 2006)). - - Turnover intentions (Nedd, 2007)
- Burnout (Laschinger, Finegan, Shamian Wilk,
2003).
8Extensive support for Kanters theory in nursing
population at individual level of analysisBUT
- No studies considered unit or contextual effects
of empowerment using a multi-level approach - OR
- Included both situational and personal
dispositional variables in explanatory models
9Two-level Model of Job Satisfaction
10Leader Member Exchangethe nature and quality
of the relationships between the leader and
follower that forms over time plays a vital role
in employee responses to their work environments
(Graen, 1984 Liden, Maslyn, 1998)
- High quality LMX relationships consists of
- Contribution (performing work beyond minimal
expectations) - Affect (friendship and liking)
- Loyalty
- Professional Respect
- High LMX managers more likely to create
conditions that ensure followers can accomplish
meaningful work.
11- LMX quality related to
- Trust, exchange of information, resources
- (Uhl-Bien, 1991).
- Perceived access to information, resources, and
support (Wayne, Shore Liden, 1997). - Nurse managers work empowerment and job
satisfaction (Laschinger, Purdy, Almost, 2007).
- We expected high LMX at the unit level to result
in greater unit level empowerment.
12Burnout..a syndrome in which a previously
committed, helping professional gradually
disengages from full participation in a job in
response to excessive job-related stressors.
(Maslach, 1981)
- Burnout consists of 3 components
- Emotional exhaustion
- Depersonalization/Cynicism
- Personal accomplishment/Efficacy
- Burnout in nurses linked to
- Decreased self efficacy or competence (Gordon,
1994) - Decreased job satisfaction and increased physical
health symptoms (Jamal Baba, 2000) - - Poor mental and physical health (Shirom et
al) - We expected burnout to be an outcome of unit
level conditions and an antecedent of individual
nurse job satisfaction.
13Core Self-Evaluation Broad personal dispositional
variable that describes an individuals
evaluation of themselves and their self worth,
shown to be an important predictor of how
employees interpret events in their work lives
(Judge 2001).
- 4 Dimensions
- Self Esteem overall value that people place on
themselves - General Self-efficacy refers to ones view of
their ability to cope, perform, and achieve
success - Locus of Control the belief that one can control
a broad set of factors experienced in life - Emotional Stability the tendency to be confident
and secure -
14- Core Self-Evaluations related to
- Job satisfaction in various work settings (Judge
Bono, 2001 Judge, Bono Locke, 2000) - Job performance (Judge et al, 2000)
- Lower job stress and strain
- LMX quality, empowerment and job satisfaction
(Laschinger, Purdy, Almost, 2007) - We hypothesized that CSE would influence nurses
experience of burnout at the individual level of
analysis.
15Job Satisfaction
- Job Satisfaction Related to
- Leadership behaviour (Irvine Evans, 1995
Laschinger et al., 1999 McNeese-Smith, 1995). - Nurses' structural and psychological empowerment
(Laschinger, Finegan, Shamian Wilk, 2003,
2004). - LMX quality (Laschinger, Purdy, Almost, 2007)
- No nursing studies have examined cross-level
effects on job satisfaction.
16Multi-Model Tested in the Study
17Methods
- Design A multi-stage Stratified Cluster
Sampling Design - Sample 7875 staff nurses in 217 hospital
units in 21 Ontario hospitals -
- Data Collection Mail survey using Dillman
approach (2000). - Return rate 40
- Staff nurses N 3156
18Demographic Profile
- Mean Age 42
- 95.3 Female
- Mean years of working experience 16.95
- High Burnout (M3.15) gt 3.0
19Instrumentation
- Leader Member Exchange
- LMX-MDM (Liden and Maslyn, 1998).
- Empowerment
- Conditions for Work Effectiveness
Questionnaire-II (Laschinger et al., 2001). - Core Self Evaluation
- Core Self Evaluation Scale (Judge, et al., 2003).
- Burnout
- Emotional Exhaustion and Cynicism subscales of
the Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey
(Schaufeli, Leiter, Maslach, Jackson, 1996). - Job Satisfaction
- Job Diagnostic Survey (Laschinger Havens,
1997).
20Data Analysis
- Multilevel SEM Modeling (Muthén Muthén, 2006)
- Permits modeling relationships among individual
and contextual variables at different levels of
analysis (both within and cross levels). - Models the non-independence of observations due
to cluster sampling by specifying a model for
each level of the multilevel data. (Longford
Muthén 1992 McDonald 1994 Muthén, 1989).
21Final Model
LMX Quality
Empowerment
.25
Level 2
Level 1
Emotional Exhaustion
Job Satisfaction
-.13
Core Self-Evaluation
-.42
.62
Cynicism
-.47
-.16
22Summary of Results
- Good fit of the hypothesized model to the
observed relations in the data (Chi Square12.03,
df1, CFI.997, TLI.945, RMSEA.06). - Both unit level LMX quality and structural
empowerment had direct effects on individual
nurses job satisfaction. - Unit level LMX had a significant negative effect
on individual nurses feelings of cynicism - Unit level empowerment had a significant negative
effect on emotional exhaustion. - CSE had an impact on job satisfaction through
burnout.
23Conclusions
- The link between LMX quality and unit level
empowerment suggests that managers can make a
difference in creating empowering, satisfied work
groups. - Results support conceptualization of structural
empowerment as a macro unit level construct. - Results support cross-level effects within
nursing work environments. - Unit level leadership and empowerment influence
individual nurses experiences of burnout and job
satisfaction. - Personal belief systems play a role in addition
to situational factors. - Context matters.
24Strategies for Healthy Workplaces
- Most burnout interventions are individual-specific
or treatment focused, not prevention focused.
Few interventions based on changing structural
sources of burnout (Nelson, Quick Simmons,
2001) - Our results demonstrate that both contextual
situational factors and personal belief systems
can have an impact on burnout, therefore
prevention strategies must address both to
promote healthy satisfying workplaces that
attract and retain nurses. - Nursing leadership plays an important role in
creating conditions that can help manage the
nursing workforce shortage.
25Thank you!
Email hkl_at_uwo.ca
26Means and Standard Deviations of Major Study
Variables