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  • Article
    Citation - Scopus: 5
    An Examination of the Relationships Between Nurses’ Team Work Attitudes, Conflicts With College and Job Satisfaction: An Example of a Public Hospital
    (Informa UK Ltd, 2022) Akyüz,F.; Tengilimoğlu,D.; Özkanan,A.; Akyüz,S.
    Nurses are one of the most important elements of the health system. In this study, it was aimed to determine the teamwork attitudes of nurses, their conflicts with their colleagues, their job satisfaction, to determine whether these variables differ according to the socio-demographic characteristics of the nurses, and to reveal the relationships between these variables. The data in the study were obtained from 253 nurses working in the Children’s Hospital of Ankara City Hospital using a questionnaire method. A significant relationship was found between the teamwork attitudes of the nurses, their colleagues, and their level of conflict and job satisfaction. © 2021 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 34
    Citation - Scopus: 33
    Effect of Organisational Trust, Job Satisfaction, Individual Variables on the Organisational Commitment in Healthcare Services
    (Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2017) Tekingunduz, Sabahattin; Top, Mehmet; Tengilimoglu, Dilaver; Karabulut, Erdem
    The purpose of the study was to investigate the effect of the organisational trust dimensions, job satisfaction dimensions, and several personal characteristics (age, education status, gender, the department that is worked at, duration of work, income, and marital status) on the organisational commitment. In this study, all staff working at a public hospital in Bingol, Turkey, have been taken into consideration. A total of 516 questionnaires were taken into consideration for data analysis in this study. In the study, organisational trust dimensions, job satisfaction dimensions, and personal variables were found to explain affective commitment variable in the proportion of 37.5%; continuance commitment variable in the proportion of 27.2%; and normative commitment variable in the proportion of 39.8%. This study revealed that cognitive trust, managers, communication, the structure of work, gender, and the department worked (laboratory or surgery room) were the significant predictors of affective commitment. Income, cognitive trust, education status, emotional trust, and the structure of work and additional opportunities have been found to have a meaningful effect on continuance commitment. Cognitive trust, promotion, managers, the structure of work, education status, emotional trust, and the structure of work, gender, and emotional trust had a meaningful effect on normative commitment. This study could have potential practical implications in healthcare management.