For Work / Against Work
Debates on the centrality of work

Andrews, Martha C; Woolum, Andrew; Mesmer-Magnus, Jessica; Viswesvaran, Chockalingam; Deshpande, Satish Reducing turnover intentions among first-year nurses: The importance of work centrality and coworker support 2024 Article Psychology of Work Coworker Support, Nurses, Role Overload, Turnover, Work Centrality, Work Constraints
Citation Andrews, Martha C; Woolum, Andrew; Mesmer-Magnus, Jessica; Viswesvaran, Chockalingam; Deshpande, Satish 2024 Article Health Serv. Manage. Res. Coworker Support Nurses Role Overload Turnover Work Centrality Work Constraints Psychology of Work

"Reducing turnover intentions among first-year nurses: The importance of work centrality and coworker support"

by Andrews, Martha C; Woolum, Andrew; Mesmer-Magnus, Jessica; Viswesvaran, Chockalingam; Deshpande, Satish (2024)

Abstract

Turnover among nurses has been recognized as a frequent and enduring problem in healthcare worldwide. The widespread nursing shortage has reached the level of a healthcare crisis. The COVID-19 pandemic has illustrated the importance of understanding the contributing factors of nurse turnover, and more importantly how to mitigate the problem. Using cross-sectional survey data collected from 3370 newly licensed nurses working across 51 metropolitan areas within 35 U.S. states, we explore how role overload and work constraints can both diminish job satisfaction and increase turnover intentions of new nurses. Coworker support and work role centrality are identified as moderators of these relationships which show potential to mitigate these negative outcomes. This study highlights the importance of coworker support and work centrality in improving job satisfaction and subsequent turnover intentions among newly licensed nurses.

Keywords

Coworker Support, Nurses, Role Overload, Turnover, Work Centrality, Work Constraints

Themes

Psychology of Work

Links to Reference

Citation

Share


How to contribute.