Intention to leave nursing: The importance of interpersonal work context, work‐home interference, and job satisfaction beyond the effect of occupational commitment
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to examine potential predictors of nurses' intention to leave the nursing profession. Specifically, this study investigates whether perceptions of the interpersonal work environment, work‐home interference, and subsequent job satisfaction, would predict occupational turnover intentions beyond the impact of nurses' occupational commitment.
Design/methodology/approach
A questionnaire is completed twice, with a one‐year interval by 1,187 registered nurses. Data were collected between October 2002 and June 2003.
Findings
The outcomes of structural equation modelling analyses reveal that an unsupportive work environment, low leadership quality, and high work‐to‐home interference results in lower job satisfaction, which, in turn, predicts nurses' intention to leave the profession one year afterwards, when controls for occupational commitment. Work‐to‐home interference shows an additional, direct relationship with occupational turnover intentions.
Practical implications
The findings have implications for organizational and individual interventions, indicating that nurses' withdrawal from the profession may be prevented by extending nurses' social support at work, helping them to combine work with non‐work, and improving the leadership quality of their supervisors.
Originality/value
Job satisfaction and work‐context factors explain additional variance in intention to leave nursing, beyond the effect of occupational commitment. Leadership quality is the strongest predictor of intention to leave nursing. Job satisfaction plays an intervening role in the relationship between work context and intention to leave nursing.
Keywords
Citation
van der Heijden, B.I.J.M., van Dam, K. and Hasselhorn, H.M. (2009), "Intention to leave nursing: The importance of interpersonal work context, work‐home interference, and job satisfaction beyond the effect of occupational commitment", Career Development International, Vol. 14 No. 7, pp. 616-635. https://doi.org/10.1108/13620430911005681
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited