D'Alessandro-Lowe Andrea M, Brown Andrea, Sullo Emily, Pichtikova Mina, Karram Mauda, Mirabelli James, McCabe Randi E, McKinnon Margaret C, Ritchie Kim
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada.
Nurs Rep. 2024 Aug 21;14(3):2030-2060. doi: 10.3390/nursrep14030152.
Staffing shortages across the healthcare sector pose a threat to the continuity of the Canadian healthcare system in the post-COVID-19 pandemic era. We sought to understand factors associated with turnover intention as well as Canadian healthcare providers' (HCPs) perspectives and experiences with turnover intention as related to both organizational and professional turnover.
A convergent questionnaire mixed-methods design was employed. Descriptive statistics and ordinal logistic regressions were used to analyze quantitative data and ascertain factors associated with turnover intention. Thematic analysis was used to analyze qualitative open-field textbox data and understand HCPs' perspectives and experiences with turnover intention.
Quantitative analyses revealed that 78.6% of HCPs surveyed (N = 398) reported at least a 25% turnover likelihood regarding their organization, with 67.5% reporting at least a 25% turnover likelihood regarding their profession. Whereas regression models revealed the significant impact of years worked, burnout, and organizational support on turnover likelihood for organizations, age, sex, burnout, and organizational support contributed to the likelihood of leaving a profession. Patterns of meaning drawn from participants' qualitative responses were organized according to the following four themes: (1) Content to stay, (2) Drowning and no one cares, (3) Moral stressors, and (4) Wrestling with the costs and benefits.
Many HCPs described weighing the costs and benefits of leaving their organization or profession during the COVID-19 pandemic. Although challenging working conditions, moral stressors, and burnout may play a significant role in HCPs' experiences of turnover intention, there is ample room to intervene with organizational support.
在新冠疫情后的时代,医疗保健部门的人员短缺对加拿大医疗保健系统的连续性构成威胁。我们试图了解与离职意愿相关的因素,以及加拿大医疗保健提供者(HCPs)在组织和职业离职方面对离职意愿的看法和经历。
采用了一种融合问卷调查的混合方法设计。描述性统计和有序逻辑回归用于分析定量数据,并确定与离职意愿相关的因素。主题分析用于分析定性的开放式文本框数据,并了解HCPs对离职意愿的看法和经历。
定量分析显示,接受调查的HCPs中有78.6%(N = 398)表示其所在组织至少有25%的离职可能性,67.5%表示其职业至少有25%的离职可能性。回归模型显示,工作年限、职业倦怠和组织支持对组织离职可能性有显著影响,而年龄、性别、职业倦怠和组织支持则影响职业离职可能性。从参与者定性回答中得出的意义模式按照以下四个主题进行组织:(1)留任意愿,(2)不堪重负却无人关心,(3)道德压力源,(4)权衡成本与收益。
许多HCPs描述了在新冠疫情期间权衡离开其组织或职业的成本与收益。尽管具有挑战性的工作条件、道德压力源和职业倦怠可能在HCPs的离职意愿经历中起重要作用,但通过组织支持仍有很大的干预空间。