The effects of burnout and supervisory social support on the relationship between work-family conflict and intention to leave: a study of Australian cancer workers.

Article


Thanacoody, R., Bartram, T. and Casimir, G. 2009. The effects of burnout and supervisory social support on the relationship between work-family conflict and intention to leave: a study of Australian cancer workers. Journal of Health Organisation and Management. 23 (1), pp. 53-69. https://doi.org/10.1108/14777260910942551
TypeArticle
TitleThe effects of burnout and supervisory social support on the relationship between work-family conflict and intention to leave: a study of Australian cancer workers.
AuthorsThanacoody, R., Bartram, T. and Casimir, G.
Abstract

Purpose- To examine the effects of burnout and supervisory social support on the relationship between work-family conflict, and intention to leave of cancer workers in an
Australian health care setting.
Design/methodology/approach- Data collected from a public hospital of 114 cancer workers were used to test a model of the consequences of work-family conflict. The strength of the indirect effects of work-family conflict on intention to leave via burnout will depend on supervisor support was tested by conducting a moderated mediation analysis.
Findings- Path analytic tests of moderated mediation supported the hypothesis that burnout mediates the relationship between work-family conflict (i.e., work-in-family conflict and family-in-work) and intention to leave the organisation and that the mediation framework is
stronger in the presence of higher social supervisory support. Implications are drawn for theory, research and practice.
Originality/value- This study applies the innovative statistical technique of moderated mediation analysis to demonstrate that burnout mediates the relationship between workfamily conflict and intention to leave the organisation and that the mediation framework is
stronger in the presence of lower social supervisory support. In the context of the continued shortage of many clinician groups theses results shed further light on the appropriate course of action for hospital management.

PublisherEmerald
JournalJournal of Health Organisation and Management
ISSN1477-7266
Publication dates
Print2009
Publication process dates
Deposited23 Feb 2010
Output statusPublished
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1108/14777260910942551
LanguageEnglish
File
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