Correlates of intent to leave job and profession for emergency medical technicians and paramedics

Purpose - A very limited number of studies have explored factors related to emergency medical services (EMS) workers leaving their jobs and the profession. This paper aims to investigate the correlates of intent to leave EMS jobs and the profession and compared two types of workers: emergency medica...

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Veröffentlicht in:Career development international 2009-09, Vol.14 (5), p.487-503
Hauptverfasser: Chapman, Susan A., Blau, Gary, Pred, Robert, Lopez, Andrea B.
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creator Chapman, Susan A.
Blau, Gary
Pred, Robert
Lopez, Andrea B.
description Purpose - A very limited number of studies have explored factors related to emergency medical services (EMS) workers leaving their jobs and the profession. This paper aims to investigate the correlates of intent to leave EMS jobs and the profession and compared two types of workers: emergency medical technicians (EMTs) and paramedics.Design methodology approach - A national sample of 308 EMTs and 625 paramedics responded to a cross-sectional survey. Independent variables were personal, job related, and work attitudes (job satisfaction). Outcomes were intent to leave job and profession. Analytic methods included factor analysis, t-tests, correlation, and hierarchical regression.Findings - Factor analysis identified a five-item intrinsic job satisfaction measure and a four-item extrinsic job satisfaction measure across both samples. Contrary to what hypothesis one predicted, paramedics had lower extrinsic job satisfaction than EMTs. There was no difference between these two groups on intrinsic job satisfaction. Consistent with the second hypothesis, after controlling for personal and job-related perceptions, extrinsic job satisfaction was negatively related to intent to leave job and profession for both EMTs and paramedics. However, intrinsic job satisfaction was negatively related only to intent to leave the profession for paramedics.Research limitations implications - Future research efforts might utilize stronger measures and incorporate longitudinal methodologies to further explore the career intention of EMS workers and similar occupational groups.Originality value - This paper examines job satisfaction and job and career intentions in a rarely studied occupation that provides critical prehospital emergency care to the population.
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ispartof Career development international, 2009-09, Vol.14 (5), p.487-503
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source Emerald Journals; Standard: Emerald eJournal Premier Collection
subjects Allied Health Personnel
Career Change
Career development planning
Comparative Analysis
Correlation
Discriminant analysis
Emergency medical care
Emergency Medical Technicians
Employee turnover
Factor Analysis
Health care industry
Hypotheses
Intention
Job Satisfaction
Medical personnel
Medical Services
National Surveys
Occupational Surveys
Paramedics
Regression (Statistics)
Studies
United States of America
Work Attitudes
title Correlates of intent to leave job and profession for emergency medical technicians and paramedics
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