Campbell N, McAllister L, Eley D
School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Queensland, Australia.
Rural Remote Health. 2012;12:1900. Epub 2012 Jun 21.
Recruitment and retention of allied health professionals (AHPs) to remote and rural Australia is challenging and correlates with poorer health status of remote and rural residents. While much has been written about the recruitment and retention problem, this study took a new approach by reviewing the literature describing the motivation of AHPs to work in remote and rural areas and then analyzing the findings from the perspective of motivation theory using Herzberg's extrinsic and intrinsic classification. Intrinsic motivation incentives are known to contribute to job satisfaction and come from within the individual, for example the pleasure derived from autonomy or challenge at work. In contrast, extrinsic motivation incentives are provided by the job and include such factors as salary and professional development provisions. Extrinsic incentives are important because they prevent job dissatisfaction. Job satisfaction has been shown to be linked with increased retention.
Thirty-five articles, including 26 from Australia, met the inclusion criteria. The key findings related to motivation from each article are outlined and the results classified into the extrinsic-intrinsic framework. The incentives are then further analyzed as having a positive or a negative influence.
In total, 38 different incentives were described a total of 246 times. Of the total, almost half (n=115) comprised extrinsic incentives with a negative influence, with poor access to professional development, professional isolation and insufficient supervision the most frequently reported. Rural lifestyle and diverse caseloads were the most frequently mentioned positive extrinsic incentives, while autonomy and community connectedness were the most cited positive intrinsic incentives. Negative intrinsic incentives were mentioned least frequently (n=18); however, of these, feeling overwhelmed and that your work was not valued by the community were the most commonly reported.
The results demonstrate the significant burden of extrinsic incentives with a negative influence that are perceived by AHPs in remote and rural areas. The high turnover rate of AHPs in remote and rural areas is likely to be, in part, due to the job dissatisfaction from these disincentives. More positive intrinsic incentives were reported than negative. This suggests the potential for intrinsic incentives, known to contribute to job satisfaction, to be mediating the extrinsic disincentives. The policy implications of this work include the importance of addressing extrinsic disincentives. Simultaneously, the existing intrinsic incentives need to be nurtured and developed. Organizations that implement strategies to enhance both extrinsic and intrinsic motivation incentives are more likely to successfully address their AHP workforce shortage.
在澳大利亚偏远和农村地区招募和留住专职医疗人员具有挑战性,且这与偏远和农村居民较差的健康状况相关。虽然关于招募和留用问题已有大量著述,但本研究采用了一种新方法,即回顾描述专职医疗人员在偏远和农村地区工作动机的文献,然后从动机理论的角度,运用赫茨伯格的外在和内在分类法对研究结果进行分析。已知内在动机激励有助于提高工作满意度,它源自个人内部,例如工作中的自主权或挑战带来的愉悦感。相比之下,外在动机激励由工作提供,包括薪资和职业发展机会等因素。外在激励很重要,因为它们可防止工作不满。研究表明,工作满意度与留用率的提高有关。
35篇文章符合纳入标准,其中26篇来自澳大利亚。概述了每篇文章中与动机相关的主要研究结果,并将结果归类到外在 - 内在框架中。然后进一步分析这些激励因素是具有积极影响还是消极影响。
总共描述了38种不同的激励因素,共计246次。其中,近一半(n = 115)是具有消极影响的外在激励因素,职业发展机会少、职业孤立和监督不足是最常被提及的。农村生活方式和多样化的工作量是最常被提及的积极外在激励因素,而自主权和社区联系是最常被引用的积极内在激励因素。消极内在激励因素被提及的频率最低(n = 18);然而,在这些因素中,感觉不堪重负以及工作未得到社区重视是最常被报告的。
结果表明,偏远和农村地区的专职医疗人员感受到了具有消极影响的外在激励因素带来的重大负担。偏远和农村地区专职医疗人员的高离职率可能部分归因于这些抑制因素导致的工作不满。报告的积极内在激励因素多于消极因素。这表明,已知有助于提高工作满意度的内在激励因素有可能缓解外在抑制因素的影响。这项工作的政策意义包括解决外在抑制因素的重要性。同时,现有的内在激励因素需要得到培养和发展。实施增强外在和内在动机激励策略的组织更有可能成功解决其专职医疗人员短缺问题。