4.5 Article

Relationships between job satisfaction, intentions to leave family practice and actually leaving among family physicians in England

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
卷 21, 期 4, 页码 499-503

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckq005

关键词

England; family physician; family practice; intention to leave; job satisfaction

资金

  1. National Primary Care Research and Development Centre from Department of Health of England

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Background: A national survey of family physicians working in the National Health Service (NHS) of England in 2001 revealed that 1/10 under 50 years of age were intending to leave direct patient care within 5 years, and that the principal predictor of their intention to leave was job satisfaction. Our research addressed two questions. First, does a family physician's stated intention to leave their job predict whether or not they actually do leave? Second, to what extent does job satisfaction predict actually leaving? Methods: Secondary data analysis was performed on 1174 family physicians aged 50 years and under, who responded to the aforementioned survey. Using data from the annual census of physicians in the NHS, we determined which physicians actually left family practice during the next 5 years. Results: Of the 1174 family physicians studied, 194 (16.5%) had left direct patient care within 5 years. Multivariate regression showed that job satisfaction predicted a physician's intention to leave direct patient care and that intention to leave predicted actually leaving. Logically, job satisfaction should then have predicted actual leaving. Our findings, however, suggest that this is only partly true. Conclusion: Although higher levels of job 'dissatisfaction' were associated with an increased likelihood of leaving, higher levels of job 'satisfaction' did not prevent leaving.

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