Psychological Contract Breach and Its Influence on the Job Embeddedness of Professional Nurses

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2520-5293/6586

Keywords:

job embeddedness; nursing shortages; psychological contract breach; retention; turnover

Abstract

A shortage of professional nurses is a global concern, and employers of professional nurses in many countries, including South Africa, are losing them to lucrative international job opportunities, further exacerbating the problem. Traditionally, the migration of nurses is studied in the context of turnover and turnover intentions. With the aim of contributing to the knowledge on the retention of nurses, this study examined whether breach of the psychological contract predicts nurses’ job embeddedness, as embeddedness has been found to increase intention to stay. A cross-sectional sample of 228 professional nurses was drawn from private hospitals in South Africa. Hierarchical regression and ANOVA were used to examine the relationship and group differences. The findings indicate that, after controlling for age, citizenship, and employment status, psychological contract breach negatively impacts job embeddedness. The implication for managers is that employers of professional nurses must honour their obligations and promises made to retain them as part of the retention strategy to stem this outflow and loss of expertise.

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Author Biographies

Sonette Jacobs, University of Johannesburg

Student

Department of Industrial Psychology and People Management

University of Johannesburg

Pharny Chrysler-Fox, University of Johannesburg

Lecturer

Dept of Industrial Psychology and People Management

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Published

2020-10-02

How to Cite

Jacobs, Sonette, Pharny Chrysler-Fox, and Rene van Wyk. 2020. “Psychological Contract Breach and Its Influence on the Job Embeddedness of Professional Nurses”. Africa Journal of Nursing and Midwifery 22 (2):18 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2520-5293/6586.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2019-07-16
Accepted 2020-08-01
Published 2020-10-02