Factors Influencing Turnover Intention of Physicians in Deprived Areas

Background: The lack of specialist physicians is a major concern in developing countries, especially in deprived cities. Objectives: This study aimed to identify the predictive variables of the turnover intention of physicians working in an undeveloped and deprived city in Iran. Methods: Participant...

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Main Authors: Zahra Nikkhah-Farkhani, Azadeh Soltani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences 2021-03-01
Series:Hospital Practices and Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jhpr.ir/article_127870_0bbcd15bcc350110ce5de6817a8b379a.pdf
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spelling doaj-0f92e9601bcd4f198e5a97196265704b2021-06-23T07:41:54ZengBaqiyatallah University of Medical SciencesHospital Practices and Research2476-390X2476-39182021-03-0162515810.34172/hpr.2021.10127870Factors Influencing Turnover Intention of Physicians in Deprived AreasZahra Nikkhah-Farkhani0Azadeh Soltani1Business Management Department, University of Bojnord, Bojnord, IranDepartment of Computer Engineering, University of Bojnord, Bojnord, IranBackground: The lack of specialist physicians is a major concern in developing countries, especially in deprived cities. Objectives: This study aimed to identify the predictive variables of the turnover intention of physicians working in an undeveloped and deprived city in Iran. Methods: Participants were 100 physicians working at North Khorasan University of Medical Sciences, Iran. The data were collected using a standard questionnaire of Turnover Intention, Interpersonal Conflict, Work-Family Conflict, Work Overload, and Organizational Support scales. We proposed a hybrid methodology to identify factors influencing turnover intention, which combines clustering and classification methods. RStudio 1.1, SPSS Clementine 12, and SPSS 22 programs were used for data analysis. After data clustering, we made a CART decision tree model for each cluster and used the variable importance feature of SPSS Clementine to discover the factors influencing turnover intention in each cluster. Results: We found two significant clusters of physicians’ turnover intention. In both clusters, interpersonal conflict (work ambiguity and work conflict) was the most important predictor of physician turnover intention, but physicians in the first cluster compared to the second had a higher turnover intention. In cluster 1, work overload, organizational support, and work-family conflict were respectively the predictors of physician turnover intention and in cluster 2, organizational support, work-family conflict, and final work overload were respectively the predictors of physician turnover intention. Conclusion: Cultural differences and the resulting interpersonal conflicts are the most important predictors of physician turnover intention in deprived areas. Turnover intention predictions of physicians with a longer work experience are different from that of others, and human resource managers must implement appropriate strategies to keep physicians in the deprived areas.http://www.jhpr.ir/article_127870_0bbcd15bcc350110ce5de6817a8b379a.pdfturnover intentionwork ambiguitywork conflictorganizational supportwork-family conflictwork overload
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zahra Nikkhah-Farkhani
Azadeh Soltani
spellingShingle Zahra Nikkhah-Farkhani
Azadeh Soltani
Factors Influencing Turnover Intention of Physicians in Deprived Areas
Hospital Practices and Research
turnover intention
work ambiguity
work conflict
organizational support
work-family conflict
work overload
author_facet Zahra Nikkhah-Farkhani
Azadeh Soltani
author_sort Zahra Nikkhah-Farkhani
title Factors Influencing Turnover Intention of Physicians in Deprived Areas
title_short Factors Influencing Turnover Intention of Physicians in Deprived Areas
title_full Factors Influencing Turnover Intention of Physicians in Deprived Areas
title_fullStr Factors Influencing Turnover Intention of Physicians in Deprived Areas
title_full_unstemmed Factors Influencing Turnover Intention of Physicians in Deprived Areas
title_sort factors influencing turnover intention of physicians in deprived areas
publisher Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences
series Hospital Practices and Research
issn 2476-390X
2476-3918
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Background: The lack of specialist physicians is a major concern in developing countries, especially in deprived cities. Objectives: This study aimed to identify the predictive variables of the turnover intention of physicians working in an undeveloped and deprived city in Iran. Methods: Participants were 100 physicians working at North Khorasan University of Medical Sciences, Iran. The data were collected using a standard questionnaire of Turnover Intention, Interpersonal Conflict, Work-Family Conflict, Work Overload, and Organizational Support scales. We proposed a hybrid methodology to identify factors influencing turnover intention, which combines clustering and classification methods. RStudio 1.1, SPSS Clementine 12, and SPSS 22 programs were used for data analysis. After data clustering, we made a CART decision tree model for each cluster and used the variable importance feature of SPSS Clementine to discover the factors influencing turnover intention in each cluster. Results: We found two significant clusters of physicians’ turnover intention. In both clusters, interpersonal conflict (work ambiguity and work conflict) was the most important predictor of physician turnover intention, but physicians in the first cluster compared to the second had a higher turnover intention. In cluster 1, work overload, organizational support, and work-family conflict were respectively the predictors of physician turnover intention and in cluster 2, organizational support, work-family conflict, and final work overload were respectively the predictors of physician turnover intention. Conclusion: Cultural differences and the resulting interpersonal conflicts are the most important predictors of physician turnover intention in deprived areas. Turnover intention predictions of physicians with a longer work experience are different from that of others, and human resource managers must implement appropriate strategies to keep physicians in the deprived areas.
topic turnover intention
work ambiguity
work conflict
organizational support
work-family conflict
work overload
url http://www.jhpr.ir/article_127870_0bbcd15bcc350110ce5de6817a8b379a.pdf
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