Predictors of nurses’ intent to stay at work in a university health center
- 4 February 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Nursing & Health Sciences
- Vol. 6 (1) , 59-68
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1442-2018.2003.00174.x
Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to evaluate nurses’ intent to stay at work and to determine the associations between intent to stay and various predictors. A sample of 108 nurses at a single tertiary care hospital filled in a questionnaire on intent to stay, satisfaction at work, satisfaction with administration, organizational commitment and work group cohesion. The results showed that the majority of nurses are planning to stay in their current job. Satisfaction at work and satisfaction with administration are the best predictors of intent to stay and explained 25.5% of intent to stay variance. It is possible that developing strategies based on the predictors of intent to stay at work could improve that intent. Healthcare organizations could consider this with the objective of increasing nurses’ intent to stay at work and, consequently, retention.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nurses’ Job Satisfaction, Organizational Commitment, and Career IntentJONA: The Journal of Nursing Administration, 2002
- How to slash costly turnoverNursing Management, 2002
- Cohesion Over Time in a Peacekeeping Medical Task ForceMilitary Psychology, 1999
- The Determinants of Career Intent Among Physicians at a U.S. Air Force HospitalHuman Relations, 1996
- Selected predictors of registered nurses' intent to stayJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1994
- Career commitment and expected utility of present job as predictors of turnover intentions and turnover behaviorJournal of Vocational Behavior, 1991
- ON THE CAUSAL ORDERING OF JOB SATISFACTION AND ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT.The Academy of Management Journal, 1986
- A Longitudinal Analysis of the Antecedents of Organizational Commitment.The Academy of Management Journal, 1984