Mediating Effects of Burnout in the Association Between Emotional Labor and Turnover Intention in Korean Clinical Nurses

Background: The current lack of the number of nurses and high nurse turnover rate leads to major problems for the health-care system in terms of cost, patient care ability, and quality of care. Theoretically, burnout may help link emotional labor with turnover intention. The purpose of this study wa...

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Main Authors: Chi-Yun Back, Dae-Sung Hyun, Da-Yee Jeung, Sei-Jin Chang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-03-01
Series:Safety and Health at Work
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791119305384
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spelling doaj-a7dbb67652f04fa88e8255757dc3fe432020-11-25T02:15:54ZengElsevierSafety and Health at Work2093-79112020-03-011118896Mediating Effects of Burnout in the Association Between Emotional Labor and Turnover Intention in Korean Clinical NursesChi-Yun Back0Dae-Sung Hyun1Da-Yee Jeung2Sei-Jin Chang3Department of Preventive Medicine, Wonju College of Medicine, Yonsei University, Wonju, South KoreaDepartment of Biostatistics & Computing, Graduate School of Yonsei University, Seoul, South KoreaDepartment of Dental Hygiene, Hanyang Women's University, Seoul, South KoreaDepartment of Preventive Medicine and Institute of Occupational & Environmental Medicine, Wonju College of Medicine, Yonsei University, Wonju, South Korea; Corresponding author. Department of Preventive Medicine and Institute of Occupational & Environmental Medicine, Wonju College of Medicine, Yonsei University, 20 llsan-ro, Wonju, Gangwon-do, South Korea.Background: The current lack of the number of nurses and high nurse turnover rate leads to major problems for the health-care system in terms of cost, patient care ability, and quality of care. Theoretically, burnout may help link emotional labor with turnover intention. The purpose of this study was to investigate the mediating effect of burnout in the association between emotional labor and turnover intention in Korean clinical nurses. Methods: Using data collected from a sample of 606 nurses from six Korean hospitals, we conducted a multiple regression analysis to determine the relationships among clinical nurses' emotional labor, burnout, and turnover intention, looking at burnout as a mediator. Results: The results fully and partially support the mediating role of burnout in the relationship between the subfactors of emotional labor and turnover intention. In particular, burnout partially mediated the relationship between emotional disharmony and hurt, organizational surveillance and monitoring, and lack of a supportive and protective system in the organization. In addition, we found that burnout has a significant full mediation effect on the relationship between overload and conflicts in customer service and turnover intention. Although the mediating effect of burnout was significantly associated with the demands and regulation of emotions, no significant effects on turnover intention were found. Conclusion: To reduce nurses' turnover, we recommend developing strategies that target both burnout and emotional labor, given that burnout fully and partially mediated the effects of emotional labor on turnover intention, and emotional labor was directly associated with turnover intention. Keywords: Burnout, Clinical nurses, Emotional labor, Turnover intentionhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791119305384
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chi-Yun Back
Dae-Sung Hyun
Da-Yee Jeung
Sei-Jin Chang
spellingShingle Chi-Yun Back
Dae-Sung Hyun
Da-Yee Jeung
Sei-Jin Chang
Mediating Effects of Burnout in the Association Between Emotional Labor and Turnover Intention in Korean Clinical Nurses
Safety and Health at Work
author_facet Chi-Yun Back
Dae-Sung Hyun
Da-Yee Jeung
Sei-Jin Chang
author_sort Chi-Yun Back
title Mediating Effects of Burnout in the Association Between Emotional Labor and Turnover Intention in Korean Clinical Nurses
title_short Mediating Effects of Burnout in the Association Between Emotional Labor and Turnover Intention in Korean Clinical Nurses
title_full Mediating Effects of Burnout in the Association Between Emotional Labor and Turnover Intention in Korean Clinical Nurses
title_fullStr Mediating Effects of Burnout in the Association Between Emotional Labor and Turnover Intention in Korean Clinical Nurses
title_full_unstemmed Mediating Effects of Burnout in the Association Between Emotional Labor and Turnover Intention in Korean Clinical Nurses
title_sort mediating effects of burnout in the association between emotional labor and turnover intention in korean clinical nurses
publisher Elsevier
series Safety and Health at Work
issn 2093-7911
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Background: The current lack of the number of nurses and high nurse turnover rate leads to major problems for the health-care system in terms of cost, patient care ability, and quality of care. Theoretically, burnout may help link emotional labor with turnover intention. The purpose of this study was to investigate the mediating effect of burnout in the association between emotional labor and turnover intention in Korean clinical nurses. Methods: Using data collected from a sample of 606 nurses from six Korean hospitals, we conducted a multiple regression analysis to determine the relationships among clinical nurses' emotional labor, burnout, and turnover intention, looking at burnout as a mediator. Results: The results fully and partially support the mediating role of burnout in the relationship between the subfactors of emotional labor and turnover intention. In particular, burnout partially mediated the relationship between emotional disharmony and hurt, organizational surveillance and monitoring, and lack of a supportive and protective system in the organization. In addition, we found that burnout has a significant full mediation effect on the relationship between overload and conflicts in customer service and turnover intention. Although the mediating effect of burnout was significantly associated with the demands and regulation of emotions, no significant effects on turnover intention were found. Conclusion: To reduce nurses' turnover, we recommend developing strategies that target both burnout and emotional labor, given that burnout fully and partially mediated the effects of emotional labor on turnover intention, and emotional labor was directly associated with turnover intention. Keywords: Burnout, Clinical nurses, Emotional labor, Turnover intention
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791119305384
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