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Leadership, job satisfaction and organizational commitment in healthcare sector: proposing and testing a model.
Mater Sociomed. 2013; 25(2):121-6.MS

Abstract

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

none declared.

INTRODUCTION

Employees' job satisfaction and commitment depends upon the leadership style of managers. This study clarifies further the relationships between leadership behaviors of managers and two employees' work-related attitudes-job satisfaction and organizational at public hospitals in Iran. A better understanding of these issues and their relationships can pinpoint better strategies for recruiting, promotion, and training of future hospital managers and employees, particularly in Iran but perhaps in other societies as well.

METHODS

This cross-sectional study was conducted using self-administered questionnaires distributed among 814 hospital employees and managers through a stratified random sampling.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

The dominant leadership style of hospital managers was participative style. Hospital employees were moderately satisfied with their jobs and committed to their organization. Salaries, benefits, promotion, contingent rewards, interpersonal relationships and working conditions were the best predictors of job satisfaction among hospitals employees. Leadership, job satisfaction and commitment were closely interrelated. The leadership behavior of managers explained 28% and 20% of the variations in job satisfaction and organizational commitment respectively.

CONCLUSION

This study clarifies the causal relations of job satisfaction and commitment, and highlights the crucial role of leadership in employees' job satisfaction and commitment. Nevertheless, participative management is not always a good leadership style. Managers should select the best leadership style according to the organizational culture and employees' organizational maturity.

Authors+Show Affiliations

School of Health Management and Information Sciences, Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Tehran, Iran.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

24082837

Citation

Mosadeghrad, Ali Mohammad, and Masoud Ferdosi. "Leadership, Job Satisfaction and Organizational Commitment in Healthcare Sector: Proposing and Testing a Model." Materia Socio-medica, vol. 25, no. 2, 2013, pp. 121-6.
Mosadeghrad AM, Ferdosi M. Leadership, job satisfaction and organizational commitment in healthcare sector: proposing and testing a model. Mater Sociomed. 2013;25(2):121-6.
Mosadeghrad, A. M., & Ferdosi, M. (2013). Leadership, job satisfaction and organizational commitment in healthcare sector: proposing and testing a model. Materia Socio-medica, 25(2), 121-6. https://doi.org/10.5455/msm.2013.25.121-126
Mosadeghrad AM, Ferdosi M. Leadership, Job Satisfaction and Organizational Commitment in Healthcare Sector: Proposing and Testing a Model. Mater Sociomed. 2013;25(2):121-6. PubMed PMID: 24082837.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Leadership, job satisfaction and organizational commitment in healthcare sector: proposing and testing a model. AU - Mosadeghrad,Ali Mohammad, AU - Ferdosi,Masoud, PY - 2013/01/11/received PY - 2013/04/25/accepted PY - 2013/10/2/entrez PY - 2013/10/2/pubmed PY - 2013/10/2/medline KW - Hospital KW - Job satisfaction KW - Leadership KW - Organizational commitment SP - 121 EP - 6 JF - Materia socio-medica JO - Mater Sociomed VL - 25 IS - 2 N2 - CONFLICT OF INTEREST: none declared. INTRODUCTION: Employees' job satisfaction and commitment depends upon the leadership style of managers. This study clarifies further the relationships between leadership behaviors of managers and two employees' work-related attitudes-job satisfaction and organizational at public hospitals in Iran. A better understanding of these issues and their relationships can pinpoint better strategies for recruiting, promotion, and training of future hospital managers and employees, particularly in Iran but perhaps in other societies as well. METHODS: This cross-sectional study was conducted using self-administered questionnaires distributed among 814 hospital employees and managers through a stratified random sampling. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: The dominant leadership style of hospital managers was participative style. Hospital employees were moderately satisfied with their jobs and committed to their organization. Salaries, benefits, promotion, contingent rewards, interpersonal relationships and working conditions were the best predictors of job satisfaction among hospitals employees. Leadership, job satisfaction and commitment were closely interrelated. The leadership behavior of managers explained 28% and 20% of the variations in job satisfaction and organizational commitment respectively. CONCLUSION: This study clarifies the causal relations of job satisfaction and commitment, and highlights the crucial role of leadership in employees' job satisfaction and commitment. Nevertheless, participative management is not always a good leadership style. Managers should select the best leadership style according to the organizational culture and employees' organizational maturity. SN - 1512-7680 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/24082837/Leadership_job_satisfaction_and_organizational_commitment_in_healthcare_sector:_proposing_and_testing_a_model_ L2 - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24082837/ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -