Influence of Personality Traits and Organizational Justice on Job Satisfaction among Nurses

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Abstract

The purpose of this research was to examine whether demographic variables, personality traits, and workplace variables (working in shifts, job tenure, and perceived organizational justice) contribute the most to the prediction of job satisfaction in nurses. The survey included 161 nurses. The instruments used in this research were as follows: the Demographic Data Questionnaire, the Perceived Organizational Justice Scale, the Job Satisfaction Scale, and the NEO five-factor inventory. The study findings indicated that age, health status, distributive justice, and procedural justice positively contribute to job satisfaction among nurses, while neuroticism contributes negatively. Older nurses, those in better health, those who are satisfied with the organization’s decision-making process, and those who feel adequately rewarded for their contributions tend to be more satisfied with their jobs. Conversely, nurses with a higher level of the neuroticism personality trait tend to be less satisfied with their job. The strongest predictors of job satisfaction among nurses were found to be health status, the personality trait of neuroticism, and distributive and procedural justice, with the age of nurses being slightly less powerful but still significant.

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APA

Mamić, M., Jovanović, T., Galić, S., Jelinčić, I., Mikšić, Š., Lovrić, B., … Vukoja, I. (2024). Influence of Personality Traits and Organizational Justice on Job Satisfaction among Nurses. Behavioral Sciences, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14030235

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