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Job Satisfaction of Nurses and Its Moderating Effects on the Relationship Between Organizational Commitment and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors.
Res Theory Nurs Pract. 2015; 29(3):226-44.RT

Abstract

Because nurses deliver care to patients on behalf of hospitals, hospitals should enhance the spontaneous organizational citizenship behaviors of front-line nurses to increase patient satisfaction and, hence, to increase the competitiveness of the hospital. However, a major gap in the literature is the lack of evidence-based studies of the correlations among job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and organizational citizenship behaviors in nursing personnel. Therefore, this study performed a cross-sectional survey of nurses in 1 large hospital in Taiwan; out of 400 questionnaires distributed, 386 valid questionnaires were collected, which was a valid response rate of 96.50%. The survey results revealed that organizational commitment has a significant positive effect on organizational citizenship behaviors (γ11 = 0.57, p < .01) and that job satisfaction has a significant positive moderating effect on the relationship between organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behaviors (Δχ2 = 26.397, p < .01). Therefore, hospitals can improve the job satisfaction of their nursing staff by improving perceived working satisfaction, interpersonal satisfaction, and remunerative satisfaction, which would then improve organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behaviors.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

26502558

Citation

Lin, Chia-Tzu, and Ching-Sheng Chang. "Job Satisfaction of Nurses and Its Moderating Effects On the Relationship Between Organizational Commitment and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors." Research and Theory for Nursing Practice, vol. 29, no. 3, 2015, pp. 226-44.
Lin CT, Chang CS. Job Satisfaction of Nurses and Its Moderating Effects on the Relationship Between Organizational Commitment and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors. Res Theory Nurs Pract. 2015;29(3):226-44.
Lin, C. T., & Chang, C. S. (2015). Job Satisfaction of Nurses and Its Moderating Effects on the Relationship Between Organizational Commitment and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors. Research and Theory for Nursing Practice, 29(3), 226-44.
Lin CT, Chang CS. Job Satisfaction of Nurses and Its Moderating Effects On the Relationship Between Organizational Commitment and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors. Res Theory Nurs Pract. 2015;29(3):226-44. PubMed PMID: 26502558.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Job Satisfaction of Nurses and Its Moderating Effects on the Relationship Between Organizational Commitment and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors. AU - Lin,Chia-Tzu, AU - Chang,Ching-Sheng, PY - 2015/10/28/entrez PY - 2015/10/28/pubmed PY - 2015/12/19/medline SP - 226 EP - 44 JF - Research and theory for nursing practice JO - Res Theory Nurs Pract VL - 29 IS - 3 N2 - Because nurses deliver care to patients on behalf of hospitals, hospitals should enhance the spontaneous organizational citizenship behaviors of front-line nurses to increase patient satisfaction and, hence, to increase the competitiveness of the hospital. However, a major gap in the literature is the lack of evidence-based studies of the correlations among job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and organizational citizenship behaviors in nursing personnel. Therefore, this study performed a cross-sectional survey of nurses in 1 large hospital in Taiwan; out of 400 questionnaires distributed, 386 valid questionnaires were collected, which was a valid response rate of 96.50%. The survey results revealed that organizational commitment has a significant positive effect on organizational citizenship behaviors (γ11 = 0.57, p < .01) and that job satisfaction has a significant positive moderating effect on the relationship between organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behaviors (Δχ2 = 26.397, p < .01). Therefore, hospitals can improve the job satisfaction of their nursing staff by improving perceived working satisfaction, interpersonal satisfaction, and remunerative satisfaction, which would then improve organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behaviors. SN - 1541-6577 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/26502558/Job_Satisfaction_of_Nurses_and_Its_Moderating_Effects_on_the_Relationship_Between_Organizational_Commitment_and_Organizational_Citizenship_Behaviors_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -