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Relational and Organisational Factors Relating to Job Satisfaction Among Critical Care Nurses

Authors
 Lim, Arum  ;  Lee, Seung Eun 
Citation
 NURSING IN CRITICAL CARE, Vol.31(2), 2026-02 
Article Number
 e70388 
Journal Title
NURSING IN CRITICAL CARE
ISSN
 1362-1017 
Issue Date
2026-02
MeSH
Adult ; Critical Care Nursing* ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Female ; Humans ; Intensive Care Units / organization & administration ; Job Satisfaction* ; Leadership ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Nursing Staff, Hospital* / psychology ; Organizational Culture ; Personnel Turnover ; Physician-Nurse Relations ; Republic of Korea ; Surveys and Questionnaires ; Workplace / psychology
Keywords
critical care nursing ; interprofessional relations ; job satisfaction ; leadership ; safety management
Abstract
Background: The global nursing shortage poses significant challenges to healthcare systems. In high-stakes environments such as intensive care units (ICUs), job satisfaction is a key determinant of nurse turnover. Aim: This study aimed to identify relational and organisational factors that influence job satisfaction among ICU nurses, as these factors remain underexplored in this context. Study Design: A cross-sectional, correlational study used survey data collected from ICU nurses across 21 hospitals in Korea. Surveys on situation monitoring, collegial nurse-physician relationships and leader identification were collected as relational factors, and safety climate and workplace safety systems were investigated as organisational factors. Pearson correlations and multiple linear regression analyses were employed to investigate the relationship between the factors and job satisfaction. Results: This study included 200 ICU nurses. Pearson correlation analyses showed that all relational and organisational factors were significantly positively associated with job satisfaction. In multiple regression analyses adjusting for years of experience, leader identification showed the strongest positive association with job satisfaction (beta = 0.328, p < 0.001), followed by safety climate (beta = 0.160, p = 0.041), workplace safety systems (beta = 0.153, p = 0.023) and collegial nurse-physician relationship (beta = 0.139, p = 0.033). Situation monitoring was not significantly associated with job satisfaction (beta = 0.044, p = 0.554). Conclusions: Job satisfaction among ICU nurses was significantly associated with both relational and organisational factors. In particular, strong identification with nurse leaders, positive collegial relationships with physicians, a favourable safety climate and the presence of systematic workplace safety procedures were all significant factors. These findings highlight the importance of nurses' identification with their leaders, interprofessional collaboration and a supportive safety environment in enhancing job satisfaction in high-acuity care settings. Relevance to Clinical Practice: Healthcare organisations should promote interprofessional collaboration between nurses and physicians, as well as relationships with nurse leaders and prioritise cultivating a strong safety culture and system for patients and healthcare staff.
Full Text
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/nicc.70388
DOI
10.1111/nicc.70388
Appears in Collections:
3. College of Nursing (간호대학) > Dept. of Nursing (간호학과) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Lee, Seung Eun(이승은) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4173-3337
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/211276
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