4.5 Article

Disentangling the relationships between staff nurses' workplace empowerment and job satisfaction

Journal

JOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT
Volume 24, Issue 8, Pages 1060-1070

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jonm.12407

Keywords

empowerment; job satisfaction; leadership; nursing

Funding

  1. Canadian Health Services Research Foundation [RC2-1612]

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Aim The primary aim of this study was to examine the relationships between structural empowerment, psychological empowerment and job satisfaction among staff nurses, after controlling for their leaders' use of empowering behaviours. Background Nurses' job satisfaction is a critical factor in health-care organisations because of its association with nurse turnover and quality of patient care. Nurses continue to report high levels of job dissatisfaction. Methods Cross-sectional data for 1007 Canadian staff nurses were analysed using hierarchical multiple regression. Results Structural empowerment was the strongest independent predictor of job satisfaction, followed by leader empowering behaviours and psychological empowerment. After accounting for the effects of structural empowerment and leader empowering behaviours, the four dimensions of psychological empowerment showed only small independent effects on job satisfaction. Psychological empowerment did not mediate the effects of structural empowerment on job satisfaction. Conclusion Nurses' job satisfaction is most influenced by their access to organisational empowerment structures. Leader empowering behaviours, structural empowerment, and psychological empowerment, operating together, enhance nurses' job satisfaction. Implications for Nursing Management Nurse leaders should use a variety of empowerment strategies that are important to nurses' job satisfaction and potentially to the quality of patient care and nurse turnover.

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