4.6 Article

Advanced practice nurse work environments and job satisfaction and intent to leave: Six-state cross sectional and observational study

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
Volume 78, Issue 8, Pages 2460-2471

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jan.15176

Keywords

intent to leave; job satisfaction; nurse practitioners; work environment

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities [R01MD011514]
  2. NIH--NINR [T32NR014205]

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This study examines the relationship between nurse practitioner work environment and job satisfaction and intent to leave in the United States. The findings suggest that improvements in work environments can lead to higher job satisfaction and lower turnover intention.
Aims: To explore the relationship between nurse practitioner work environment and nurse practitioner outcomes (job satisfaction and intent to leave) in the United States. Design: The study used a cross-sectional survey design to collect survey data from primary care nurse practitioners in six states in the United States. Methods: We sent mail surveys to 5689 eligible nurse practitioners in Arizona, New Jersey, Washington, Pennsylvania, California and Texas. The mail also contained an online link. Participants could complete either the paper or online questionnaire. In total, 1244 participants completed the survey in 2018-2019. The work environment was measured using the Nurse Practitioner- -Primary Care Organizational Climate Questionnaire comprised of four subscales: Nurse Practitioner--Administration Relations, Nurse Practitioner-Physician Relations, Independent Practice and Support and Professional Visibility. Global items measured job satisfaction and intent to leave. We used mixed--effect proportional--odds cumulative logit models to assess the association between work environment and job satisfaction and intent to leave. Results: Overall, 90% of participants were either very satisfied or somewhat satisfied with their job and 22% reported intent to leave their job in 1 year. With a one-unit increase in the organizational-level Nurse Practitioner-Administration Relations score, the odds of having a higher job satisfaction level increased by about four times and the odds of intent to leave job decreased by about 60%. A higher organizational--level Nurse Practitioner-Physician Relations score was significantly associated with higher job satisfaction and lower odds of intent to leave. Conclusion: Improvements in work environments may improve nurse practitioner job satisfaction and retention. Impact: This study examined the relationship between work environment, job satisfaction and turnover intention of nurse practitioners. Better work environment is associated with higher job satisfaction and lower turnover intention. Findings have implications for clinical leadership who can take actions to create better work environments to increase the nurse practitioner workforce capacity.

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