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Abstract
Healthcare supervisors who lack proper knowledge of the profession’s standards may inadvertently put patients’ safety at risk. Clinical workers’ job satisfaction and turnover intentions potentially affect the quality of care provided to patients. Contingency Theory, Transformational Theory and Situational Theory are appropriate to underpin this study because healthcare supervisor expertise can affect job satisfaction and turnover intentions of their employees. This causal comparative study examined the relationship between clinical workers’ perceived leadership expertise of their supervisor and the turnover intentions and job satisfaction of employees of healthcare organisations in Southern Louisiana. The study included research questions regarding the following: the relationship between the responses of supervisors and clinical workers on the Leadership Practices Inventory (LPI), the relationship between clinical workers’ job satisfaction, as measured by the Job in General scale, and their perceptions of their general healthcare supervisor’s expertise, and the relationship between clinical workers’ turnover intentions, as measured by the turnover intention scale of the Michigan Organizational Assessment, and their perceptions of their general healthcare supervisor’s expertise. Utilising the analysis of variance, no statistically significant relationship was identified among the variables. The primary findings of the study, however, revealed a strong association between a supervisor’s expertise and the leadership practices of modelling the way and encouraging the heart on LPI. Although the findings were not aligned with those of previous studies, the results are valuable to healthcare leaders seeking to examine the relationship of healthcare supervisor competencies and workforce shortages.
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Author's Biography
Michon R. Revader , DHA, RRT, RRT-NPS, is an instructor in the cardiopulmonary science programme at Louisiana State University Health in Shreveport, LA. She earned her Doctor of Health Administration from the University of Phoenix and her Bachelor of Science in Cardiopulmonary Science from LSUHSC in New Orleans, LA. Her clinical experience and educational background in healthcare administration has given her a broad base from which to approach many topics. She is a member of the American Association for Respiratory Care, National Board for Respiratory Care and American Association of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Rehabilitation. Dr. Revader is a registered respiratory therapist with over 16 years of clinical experience. Before accepting a faculty position, she was a lead therapist working in speciality areas of the neonatal and adult intensive care units.
Citation
Revader, Michon R. (2021, December 1). Supervisor’s effect on clinical workers’ job satisfaction and turnover intentions. In the Management in Healthcare: A Peer-Reviewed Journal, Volume 5, Issue 2. https://doi.org/10.69554/IJZO6312.Publications LLP