Wellbeing, Job Satisfaction and Commitment among Australian Community Health Workers: The Relationship with Working Conditions
Andrew Noblet, Cary Cooper, John McWilliams and Annette Rudd
Australian Journal of Primary Health
13(3) 40 - 48
Published: 2007
Abstract
The Australian community health sector has undergone extensive organisational reform in recent times, and, in the push to enhance efficiencies and contain costs, there are indications that these changes may have undermined the wellbeing of community health personnel and their ability to provide high quality illness-prevention services. The aim of this study was to examine the working environments experienced by community health service employees and identify conditions that are predictive of employee stress. The study was guided by a tailored version of the demand-control-support model, whereby the generic components of the model had been augmented by more situation-specific stressors. The results of multiple regression analyses indicated that job control, and, to a lesser extent, social support, were closely associated with the outcome variables (psychological health, job satisfaction and organisational commitment). The more situation-specific stressors also accounted for significant proportions of explained variance. Overall, the results suggest that working conditions, particularly job control, social support and specific job stressors, offer valuable opportunities for protecting and enhancing the wellbeing of community health service personnel.https://doi.org/10.1071/PY07037
© La Trobe University 2007