Factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policies

Background: Job satisfaction among health workers is an important indicator in assessing the performance and efficiency of health services. Objective: This study measured job satisfaction and determined associated factors among health workers in 38 commune health stations in an urban district and a...

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Main Authors: Bach Xuan Tran, Minh Van Hoang, Hinh Duc Nguyen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2013-01-01
Series:Global Health Action
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.globalhealthaction.net/index.php/gha/article/view/18619/pdf_1
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spelling doaj-8dd1ae71997440089020e7cd6f97af872020-11-25T00:37:19ZengTaylor & Francis GroupGlobal Health Action1654-98802013-01-01601610.3402/gha.v6i0.18619Factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policiesBach Xuan TranMinh Van HoangHinh Duc NguyenBackground: Job satisfaction among health workers is an important indicator in assessing the performance and efficiency of health services. Objective: This study measured job satisfaction and determined associated factors among health workers in 38 commune health stations in an urban district and a rural district of Hanoi, Vietnam. A total of 252 health workers (36 medical doctors and 216 nurses and technicians; 74% female) were interviewed. A job satisfaction measure was developed using factor analysis, from which four dimensions emerged, namely ‘benefits and prospects,’ ‘facility and equipment,’ ‘performance,’ and ‘professionals.’ Results: The results demonstrate that respondents were least satisfied with the following categories: salary and incentives (24.0%), benefit packages (25.1%), equipment (35.7%), and environment (41.8%). The average satisfaction score was moderate across four domains; it was the highest for ‘performance’ (66.6/100) and lowest for ‘facility and equipment’ (50.4/100). Tobit-censored regression models, constructed using stepwise selection, determined significant predictors of job satisfaction including age, areas of work and expertise, professional education, urban versus rural setting, and sufficient number of staff. Conclusion: The findings highlight the need to implement health policies that focus on incentives, working conditions, workloads, and personnel management at grassroots level.http://www.globalhealthaction.net/index.php/gha/article/view/18619/pdf_1job satisfactionhuman resourcecommune health stationshealth workersVietnam
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bach Xuan Tran
Minh Van Hoang
Hinh Duc Nguyen
spellingShingle Bach Xuan Tran
Minh Van Hoang
Hinh Duc Nguyen
Factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policies
Global Health Action
job satisfaction
human resource
commune health stations
health workers
Vietnam
author_facet Bach Xuan Tran
Minh Van Hoang
Hinh Duc Nguyen
author_sort Bach Xuan Tran
title Factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policies
title_short Factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policies
title_full Factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policies
title_fullStr Factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policies
title_full_unstemmed Factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policies
title_sort factors associated with job satisfaction among commune health workers: implications for human resource policies
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Global Health Action
issn 1654-9880
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Background: Job satisfaction among health workers is an important indicator in assessing the performance and efficiency of health services. Objective: This study measured job satisfaction and determined associated factors among health workers in 38 commune health stations in an urban district and a rural district of Hanoi, Vietnam. A total of 252 health workers (36 medical doctors and 216 nurses and technicians; 74% female) were interviewed. A job satisfaction measure was developed using factor analysis, from which four dimensions emerged, namely ‘benefits and prospects,’ ‘facility and equipment,’ ‘performance,’ and ‘professionals.’ Results: The results demonstrate that respondents were least satisfied with the following categories: salary and incentives (24.0%), benefit packages (25.1%), equipment (35.7%), and environment (41.8%). The average satisfaction score was moderate across four domains; it was the highest for ‘performance’ (66.6/100) and lowest for ‘facility and equipment’ (50.4/100). Tobit-censored regression models, constructed using stepwise selection, determined significant predictors of job satisfaction including age, areas of work and expertise, professional education, urban versus rural setting, and sufficient number of staff. Conclusion: The findings highlight the need to implement health policies that focus on incentives, working conditions, workloads, and personnel management at grassroots level.
topic job satisfaction
human resource
commune health stations
health workers
Vietnam
url http://www.globalhealthaction.net/index.php/gha/article/view/18619/pdf_1
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