Franco Lynne Miller, Bennett Sara, Kanfer Ruth, Stubblebine Patrick
University Research Co., LLC, 7200 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 600, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2004 Jan;58(2):343-55. doi: 10.1016/s0277-9536(03)00203-x.
Health worker motivation reflects the interactions between workers and their work environment. Because of the interactive nature of motivation, local organizational and broader sector policies have the potential to affect motivation of health workers, either positively or negatively, and as such to influence health system performance. Yet little is known about the key determinants and outcomes of motivation in developing and transition countries. This exploratory research, unique in its broader study of a whole range of motivational determinants and outcomes, was conducted in two hospitals in Jordan and two in Georgia. Three complementary approaches to data collection were used: (1) a contextual analysis; (2) a qualitative 360-degree assessment; and (3) a quantitative in-depth analysis focused on the individual determinants and outcomes of the worker's motivational process. A wide range of psychometric scales was used to assess personality differences, perceived contextual factors and motivational outcomes (feelings, thoughts and behaviors) on close to 500 employees in each country. Although Jordan and Georgia have very different cultural and socio-economic environments, the results from these two countries exhibited many similarities among key determinants: self-efficacy, pride, management openness, job properties, and values had significant effects on motivational outcomes in both countries. Where results were divergent, differences between the two countries highlight the importance of local culture on motivational issues, and the need to tailor motivational interventions to the specific issues related to particular professional or other groupings in the workforce. While workers themselves state that financial reward is critical for their work satisfaction, the data suggest a number of non-financial interventions that may be more effective means to improve worker motivation. This research highlights the complexity of worker motivation, and the need for a more comprehensive approach to increasing motivation, satisfaction and performance, and for interventions at both organizational and policy levels.
卫生工作者的积极性反映了工作者与其工作环境之间的相互作用。由于积极性具有相互作用的性质,地方组织政策和更广泛的部门政策有可能对卫生工作者的积极性产生积极或消极影响,进而影响卫生系统的绩效。然而,在发展中国家和转型国家,人们对积极性的关键决定因素和结果知之甚少。这项探索性研究在约旦的两家医院和格鲁吉亚的两家医院进行,其独特之处在于对一系列激励因素和结果进行了更广泛的研究。研究采用了三种互补的数据收集方法:(1) 背景分析;(2) 定性的360度评估;(3) 针对工作者激励过程的个体决定因素和结果的定量深入分析。使用了广泛的心理测量量表来评估每个国家近500名员工的人格差异、感知到的背景因素和激励结果(情感、思想和行为)。尽管约旦和格鲁吉亚有着截然不同的文化和社会经济环境,但这两个国家在关键决定因素方面呈现出许多相似之处:自我效能感、自豪感、管理开放性、工作性质和价值观对两国的激励结果都有显著影响。在结果存在差异的地方,两国之间的差异凸显了当地文化在激励问题上的重要性,以及针对劳动力中特定专业或其他群体的具体问题量身定制激励干预措施的必要性。虽然工作者自己表示经济奖励对他们的工作满意度至关重要,但数据表明一些非财务干预措施可能是提高工作者积极性的更有效手段。这项研究凸显了工作者积极性的复杂性,以及需要采取更全面的方法来提高积极性、满意度和绩效,以及在组织和政策层面进行干预。