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Work experiences among nurses and physicians in the beginning of their professional careers – analyses using the effort–reward imbalance model
Authors:Enberg Birgit PhD  RPT  Sundelin Gunnevi PhD  RPT  Öhman Ann PhD  RPT
Affiliation:1. Department of Community Medicine and Rehabilitation, Division of Physiotherapy, Ume? University, Sweden;2. Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Division of Epidemiology and Global Health, Ume? University, Sweden;3. Ume? Centre for Gender Studies, Ume? University, Sweden
Abstract:Scand J Caring Sci; 2013; 27; 36–43 Work experiences among nurses and physicians in the beginning of their professional careers – analyses using the effort–reward imbalance model The aim of the study was to scrutinise how nurses and physicians, employed by the county councils in Sweden, assess their work environment in terms of effort and reward at the start of their career. The aim was also to estimate associations between work satisfaction and the potential outcomes from the effort–reward imbalance (ERI) questionnaire. The study group, 198 nurses and 242 physicians who graduated in 1999, is a subsample drawn from a national cross‐sectional survey. Data were collected in the third year after graduation among the nurses and in the fourth year after graduation among registered physicians. The effort–reward imbalance questionnaire, together with a question on work satisfaction, was used to evaluate psychosocial factors at work. The results reveal that nurses scored higher on effort, lower on reward and experienced higher effort–reward imbalance, compared with physicians. Women scored higher on work‐related overcommitment (WOC) compared with men. Among the physicians, logistic regression analysis revealed a statistically significant association between WOC and ERI, sex, effort and reward. Logistic regression analysis also revealed a statistically significant association between WOC and ERI and between WOC and effort among the nurses. Dissatisfaction with work was significantly higher among those who scored worst on all three ERI subscales (effort, reward and WOC) and also among those with the highest ERI ratios compared with the other respondents. In conclusion, to prevent future work‐related health problems and work dissatisfaction among nurses and physicians in the beginning of their professional careers, signs of poor psychosocial working conditions have to been taken seriously. In future work‐related stress research among healthcare personnel, gender‐specific aspects of working conditions must be further highlighted to develop more gender‐sensitive analyses.
Keywords:nurses  physicians  county councils  work experiences  effort–  reward imbalance  healthcare  overcommitment  work satisfaction
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