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ÀÌÀº¿µ ( Lee Eun-Yeong ) - Chungbuk National University Hospital Quality Imprevement Team
±èÀº¿µ ( Kim Eun-Yung ) - Chungbuk National University Department of Nursing
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Abstract
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Purpose: This study aimed to examine the mediating effects of clinical nurses¡¯ job crafting on organizational effectiveness based on the job demands-resources model proposed by Bakker and Demerouti (2017).
Methods: The participants consisted of 393 nurses working in nursing units of a tertiary general hospital located in Cheongju region. The data, collected using questionnaire from August 9 to August 20, 2021, were analyzed using SPSS 23.0 and AMOS 27.0.
Results: The goodness-of-fit (GoF) test results on the modified model (¥ö2 = 2.7, GFI = .94, SRMR = .03, RMSEA = .06, NFI = .92, CFI = .94, TLI = .92, AGFI = .90), indicated that the GoF index satisfied the recommended level. Regarding the effects of each variable on organizational effectiveness, job crafting showed statistically significant direct (¥â = .48, p < .001), indirect (¥â = .23, p < .001), and total effects (¥â = .71, p < .001). Burnout showed statistically significant direct effect (¥â = - .17, p < .001). Work engagement showed statistically significant direct (¥â = .41, p < .001) and total effects (¥â = .41, p < .001). The factors explaining organizational effectiveness were job crafting, burnout, and work engagement, which had an explanatory power of 76.7%.
Conclusion: Nurses¡¯ job crafting is an important mediating factor for enhancing the organizational effectiveness of nursing organizations. Hospitals should develop job-crafting success cases and related education and training programs as a strategy for enhancing the job crafting of nurses and, consequently organizational effectiveness.
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KeyWords
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Nurses, Workload, Burnout, Work Engagement, Self Efficacy
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