• KACHN
  • Contact us
  • E-Submission
ABOUT
BROWSE ARTICLES
EDITORIAL POLICY
FOR CONTRIBUTORS

Page Path

5
results for

"직무"

Filter

Article category

Keywords

Publication year

Authors

"직무"

Original Article

Structural Equation Modeling of Job Engagement in Pediatric Nurses Based on the Job Crafting Model
Jung Mi Kang, Hun Ha Cho
Child Health Nurs Res 2020;26(2):201-211.   Published online April 30, 2020
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4094/chnr.2020.26.2.201
Purpose
The goal of this study was to construct a structural equation model of job engagement in pediatric nurses based on Tims and Bakker's job crafting model.
Methods
In total, 203 pediatric nurses participated in this study, which was conducted to analyze the relationships among the concepts of job demands, job resources, person-job fit, job crafting and job engagement. Data were collected from July 24 to August 30, 2017, and analyzed using SPSS 20.0 and AMOS 21.0.
Results
The hypothetical model appeared to fit the data. Six of the nine hypotheses selected for the hypothetical model were statistically significant. The job engagement model showed significant direct effects for job crafting, person-job fit and job resources, which collectively explained 61.5% of the variation in pediatric nurses' job engagement.
Conclusion
Based on the findings of this study, a strategy will be needed to improve job resources and person-job fit in order to promote job engagement among pediatric nurses. Job crafting was affected by the factors of job resources and person-job fit, which should be addressed in job crafting promotion programs.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • How job crafting enhances job satisfaction: the moderating role of perceived organizational support in Jordan’s public healthcare sector
    Mohammad Fathi Almaaitah, Tha’er Abdelwahab Almajali, Mohammad M. Taamneh, Ali Zakariya Al-Quran, Hayel Falah Alserhan
    Discover Sustainability.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Job crafting leading to employee life satisfaction amongst service sector professionals: Can person-job fit be a possible mediator?
    Mimi Banerjee, V.N. Giri
    IIMB Management Review.2025; 37(2): 100572.     CrossRef
  • Job Crafting as the Missing Link: Understanding Its Role in Nurses’ Work Engagement
    Kyungjin Lee, Ja Kyung Seo, Seung Eun Lee, Yunhong Liu
    Journal of Nursing Management.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The relationship between job crafting and work engagement among nurses in China: A latent profile analysis
    Hong‐li Zhang, Jun‐hua Liu, Wen‐jing Ma, Xiao‐ling Xu, Xiao‐lan Guo, Hong‐juan Lang
    Nursing Open.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Effect of Empowering Leadership on Work Engagement and the Mediating Effect of Job Crafting among Clinical Nurses
    Sujeong Han
    Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administratio.2023; 29(1): 22.     CrossRef
  • Effects of Clinical Nurses’ Job Crafting on Organizational Effectiveness Based on Job Demands-Resource Model
    Eun Young Lee, Eungyung Kim
    Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing.2023; 53(1): 129.     CrossRef
  • A Structural Model for Burnout and Work Engagement of Nurses in Long-term Care Hospitals: Application of the Expanded Job Demand-Job Resources Model
    Eun Ok Yang, Mee Ock Gu
    Journal of Korean Gerontological Nursing.2022; 24(1): 108.     CrossRef
  • Factors Affecting Nursing Intention for Patients with Emerging Infectious Diseases among Nurses in Hospitals Dedicated to COVID-19: A Focus on the Mediating Effects of Job Crafting
    Yu Na Lim, Ju Young Park
    Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamentals of Nursi.2022; 29(1): 105.     CrossRef
  • Effects of Job Crafting and Job Engagement on Career Management Behavior among Public Institution Nurses: Mediating Effect of Job Engagement
    Seohyun Kwon, Taewha Lee
    Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administratio.2022; 28(3): 261.     CrossRef
  • Towards Employee Creativity in the Healthcare Sector: Investigating the Role of Polychronicity, Job Engagement, and Functional Flexibility
    Junaid Waheed, Wen Jun, Zahid Yousaf, Magdalena Radulescu, Hadi Hussain
    Healthcare.2021; 9(7): 837.     CrossRef
  • 8,200 View
  • 209 Download
  • 10 Crossref

Original article

Purpose
The purpose of this descriptive survey study was to characterize the relationship between clinical decision-making and job satisfaction among pediatric nurses and to elucidate the mediating effects of the nurse-parent partnership on that relationship.
Methods
The subjects of the study were 174 nurses who had worked in a pediatric ward in a university hospital, general hospital, or children's hospital. Data were collected from June 20, 2016 to August 10, 2016 and analysed using descriptive statistics, the t-test, analysis of variance, the Pearson correlation coefficient, and three-step mediated regression analysis in SPSS version 22.0 for Windows.
Results
The nurse-parent partnership had significant effects on clinical decision-making and job satisfaction, with an explanatory power of 19% and 26%, respectively. The nurse-parent partnership had a partial mediating effect on the relationship between clinical decision-making and job satisfaction (Sobel test: Z=4.31, p<.001).
Conclusion
The nurse-parent partnership had a partial mediating effect on the relationship between clinical decision-making and job satisfaction among pediatric nurses. Therefore, in order to improve the job satisfaction of pediatric nurses, it is necessary to develop effective educational programs and strategies to address their clinical decision-making and their experiences of the nurse-parent partnership.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Impact of Pediatric Nurses’ Nursing Professionalism on Quality of Nursing Care: Double Mediating Effect of Clinical Decision Making and Pediatric Nurse-Parent Partnership
    Jung-Eun Lee, Mi-Young Choi
    Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administratio.2024; 30(1): 55.     CrossRef
  • Research trends in nurse–parent partnership: A scoping review of the paediatric field in South Korea
    Seo Jin Park, Ji Yeong Yun, Jina Lee, In Young Cho
    Nursing Open.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The influencing factors of pediatric nurses’ perception of patient safety culture and partnership with patients’ parents on patient safety nursing activities in South Korea: a descriptive study
    Seo Jin Lee, Young Ran Han
    Child Health Nursing Research.2024; 30(4): 255.     CrossRef
  • Effects of Emotional Intelligence on Job Satisfaction of Pediatric Nurses: The Mediating Effect of Communication Skills and Pediatric Nurse-Parent Partnership
    Da Gyeon Lee, Mi-Young Choi
    Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing.2023; 53(5): 514.     CrossRef
  • Influence of Communication Competence and Communication Style on the Nurse-Parent Partnership in Pediatric Nurses
    Hyun Jin Cho, Hyoung Sook Park
    Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamentals of Nursi.2022; 29(2): 170.     CrossRef
  • The Experience of Emotional Labor and Its Related Factors among Nurses in General Hospital Settings in Republic of Korea: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
    Da-Jung Ha, Jung-Hyun Park, Su-Eun Jung, Boram Lee, Myo-Sung Kim, Kyo-Lin Sim, Yung-Hyun Choi, Chan-Young Kwon
    Sustainability.2021; 13(21): 11634.     CrossRef
  • 10,505 View
  • 401 Download
  • 6 Crossref
Original Articles
Effects of Social Capital, Labor Intensity and Incivility on Job Burnout in Pediatric Nurses
Jung Mi Kang, Won Soon Kim, Hun Ha Cho
Child Health Nurs Res 2017;23(1):61-69.   Published online January 31, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4094/chnr.2017.23.1.61
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between social capital, labor intensity and incivility and effects the job burnout in pediatric nurses.
Methods
A survey is conducted with 186 nurses working in pediatric units at 10 hospital in B, Y, K city. The data was analyzed with SPSS 21.0 program using descriptive statistics, t-test, ANOVA, Pearson’s correlation coefficient, Scheffés test and multiple linear regression analysis.
Results
A score of 3.31 out of 5 for the level of social capital, a score of 3.16 out of 5 on the labor intensity, and 2.20 points on a 5 point on incivility, 4.15 points on a 7 point on job burnout. Job burnout explained 21.7% of the variance in incivility, social capital-shared values, job satisfaction, and labor intensity.
Conclusion
The findings indicate that the major factors effecting pediatric nurses job burnout are incivility. Thus, in order to reduce pediatric nurses job burnout are to investigate degree of incivility, it is nesessary to develop intervention programs to incivility and labor intensity that reduced organizational level of measures need to establish.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • COVID-19 Salgını Sırasında Hemşirelerde Tükenmişlik ve İş Doyumu: Pediatri ve Erişkin Kliniklerinin Karşılaştırılması
    Zeynep Karaköse, Rabiye Güney
    Health Care Academician Journal.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The influencing factors of pediatric nurses’ perception of patient safety culture and partnership with patients’ parents on patient safety nursing activities in South Korea: a descriptive study
    Seo Jin Lee, Young Ran Han
    Child Health Nursing Research.2024; 30(4): 255.     CrossRef
  • The mediating effect of workplace incivility on organization culture in South Korea: A descriptive correlational analysis of the turnover intention of nurses
    Yoon Heui Lee, Jumi Lee, Soo‐Kyoung Lee
    Journal of Nursing Scholarship.2022; 54(3): 367.     CrossRef
  • How workplace incivility leads to work alienation: A moderated mediation model
    Bingnan Xia, Xiaochen Wang, Qing Li, Yuzhen He, Wei Wang
    Frontiers in Psychology.2022;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Structural Equation Modeling of Nurses’ Experience of Workplace Incivility
    So Young Won, Heejung Choi
    Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administratio.2022; 28(4): 342.     CrossRef
  • Structural Equation Modeling on Workplace Incivility of Nurses: Evolution to Bullying
    Seo In Kim, Soukyoung Kim
    Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administratio.2022; 28(4): 406.     CrossRef
  • The Experience of Emotional Labor and Its Related Factors among Nurses in General Hospital Settings in Republic of Korea: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
    Da-Jung Ha, Jung-Hyun Park, Su-Eun Jung, Boram Lee, Myo-Sung Kim, Kyo-Lin Sim, Yung-Hyun Choi, Chan-Young Kwon
    Sustainability.2021; 13(21): 11634.     CrossRef
  • Impact of workplace incivility on compassion competence of Korean nurses: Moderating effect of psychological capital
    Chung Hee Woo, Chanhee Kim
    Journal of Nursing Management.2020; 28(3): 682.     CrossRef
  • Relationship between Job Stress and Compassion Satisfaction, Compassion Fatigue, Burnout for Nurses in Children’s Hospital
    Heekang Choi, Jisun Park, Mijeong Park, Bobae Park, Yeseul Kim
    Child Health Nursing Research.2017; 23(4): 459.     CrossRef
  • 11,846 View
  • 235 Download
  • 9 Crossref
Purpose
The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of child-care efficacy, job efficacy, and health promoting lifestyle on the job satisfaction of in-home child care helpers who are called Idolbomi.
Methods
Participants for this survey were 153 in-home child care helpers who worked in Seoul. Data were collected from May 23 to October 17, 2014 using self-report structured questionnaires. Data were analyzed using IBM/SPSS 18.0 program.
Results
There were significantly positive correlations between child-care efficacy, job efficacy, health promoting lifestyle, and job satisfaction. Stepwise multiple regression analysis revealed that the predictors of job satisfaction were spiritual growth, education level, job efficacy, effect of income.
Conclusion
Therefore, we need to develop strategies to enhance the job efficacy and health promoting lifestyle of in-home child care helpers to improve their job satisfaction.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Factors Influencing Quality of Care Service of Caregivers for Preschoolers
    Soyeon Jung, Younhee Hong, Sohyune Sok
    International Journal of Environmental Research an.2021; 18(8): 4291.     CrossRef
  • 10,552 View
  • 122 Download
  • 1 Crossref
Comparison of Job Performance, Job Satisfaction and Job Stress of Child Health Nurse Practitioners by Roles in the Work Place
Hyejung Lee, Eunjoo Huh, Sanghee Kim, Kieun Kim, Minjeong Seo
Child Health Nurs Res 2015;21(3):253-260.   Published online July 31, 2015
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4094/chnr.2015.21.3.253
Purpose
Child Health nurse practitioners (CHNPs) in Korea have important roles in disease management and health promotion for children and adolescents. Yet, practices of CHNPs licensed and employed in hospitals have not been adequately identified. Thus, in this study the scope of practice by CHNPs and job satisfaction and stress were investigated and compared according to the CHNPs’ position in the working place.
Methods
A descriptive cross-sectional survey design was used. All 53 licensed CHNPs participated in the mail survey which included a 71-item questionnaire on job performance and job satisfaction and a job contents questionnaire. Descriptive statistics, x2 test, independent t-test and Mann-Whitney U test were used to compare CHNPs employed as nurse practitioner (NP) and CHNPs employed as staff nurses.
Results
Compared to CHNPs employed as staff nurses, CHNPs employed as NPs more frequently provided education, environment management, coordination and research in their practice areas. No significant difference was found in job satisfaction between the two groups except for the administration and income subdomains. Only the physical exertion subdomain in job stress was stressful to CHNP employed as staff nurse.
Conclusions
Job performance of CHNPs in Korea needs to be revised to include more practical practice in education, coordination, and research related areas.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Physical examination competence as a predictor of diagnostic reasoning among new advanced practice nurse students: a cross-sectional study
    Hyejung Lee, Young Joo Lee, JuHee Lee, Sanghee Kim
    Contemporary Nurse.2019; 55(4-5): 360.     CrossRef
  • Pediatric nurse practitioners’ clinical competencies and knowing patterns in nursing: Focus group interviews
    Hyejung Lee, Anna Kim, Anna Meong, Minjeong Seo
    Contemporary Nurse.2017; 53(5): 515.     CrossRef
  • 21,111 View
  • 531 Download
  • 2 Crossref
TOP