Background: While individuals' thoughts and behaviors are shaped according to their environment's cultural characteristics, the managers' values also shape organizational culture. Therefore, the concepts of person-organization fit and person-job fit can also be affected by the managers' culture.
Objective: This research aimed to examine the relationships between organization, job fit and cultural values of nurse managers working in university hospitals in Turkey.
Methods: This research is a cross-sectional analytical study. The research sample comprised 391 nurse managers working in the 20 university hospitals in Turkey. The research data were collected via an information form, individual cultural values scale, person-organization fit scale (POFS), and person-job fit scale (PJFS). Descriptive statistics were computed to define demographic characteristics. Spearman's correlation coefficient was used to evaluate the relationship between numeric variables.
Results: The means of the nurse managers' power distance, uncertainty avoidance, collectivism, masculinity, long-term orientation scores were 3.03, 5.98, 5.34, 3.02, and 5.60, respectively. The means of the nurse managers' POFS and PJFS scores were 3.33 and 4.13, respectively. There was a positive relationship among power distance and long-term orientation dimensions and person-organization fit, while there was a negative relationship between the masculinity dimension and person-job fit (p < 0.05).
Conclusions: This study found that the nurse managers' individual cultural values were related to the organization and job fit. In this context, it is worth considering the individuals' cultural values in nurse recruitment and selection processes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/WOR-220152 | DOI Listing |
Can Med Educ J
November 2024
Department of Surgery, University of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Background: Finding applicants that fit in with educational environments is a goal of many educators in hopes that it will lead to successful training. "Fit" is used colloquially to describe a general feeling, however the field of study has grown to include specific terms describing the compatibility between people and their environments, organizations, and jobs. Despite common use, the term is used often but non-specifically in medical education.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Psychol
October 2024
School of Psychology, South China Normal University, Guangzhou, 510631, China.
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between employees' career adaptability and work engagement. Specifically, this study investigates the mediating role of person‒organization fit in the relationship between career adaptability and work engagement as well as the moderating role of job insecurity in this mediating effect.
Methods: We collected data from 248 full-time employees in China and utilized robust statistical techniques to test a moderated mediation model that includes the constructs of career adaptability, person‒organization fit, job insecurity, and work engagement.
J Eval Clin Pract
September 2024
Department of Public Health Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, Balikesir University, Balıkesir, Turkey.
Background: Due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the risk of quiet quitting among healthcare professionals is increasing. Individuals who engage in the quiet quitting process may also unknowingly become the target of quiet firing. The concepts of quiet quitting and quiet firing play a crucial role in promoting employee resilience and preventing organizational losses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
August 2024
Management College, Zhongkai University of Agriculture and Engineering, Guangzhou, China.
Job burnout and work pressure are pivotal concerns in human resource management and workplace mental health, profoundly impacting organizational sustainability and individual well-being. Grounded in the person-environment fit theory, this empirical study quantitatively investigates the psychological mechanisms of person-job fit and person-organization fit in job burnout, highlighting the mediating role of work pressure. To test our hypotheses, we investigated 477 employees from 63 IT enterprises around China's Pearl River Delta region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Psychol
August 2024
Department of Management, Warrington College of Business, University of Florida.
Although recruitment and perceptions of fit are inherently social-as they reflect the interactions between applicants and recruiting firms-applicants' social networks during recruitment can exert both positive and potentially negative consequences for subsequent applicant perceptions and behaviors. In this study, we examine the role of applicants' friends' perceptions of fit with the same recruiting organizations. Integrating ideas from social information processing theory and the person-organization (P-O) fit literature, we argue that drive social learning and social influence processes for applicants, thus predicting applicant perceptions and behaviors toward recruiting firms.
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