UI Postgraduate College

INFLUENCE OF CONTEXTUAL AND DISPOSITIONAL FACTORS, AND MEDIATING ROLE OF RESILIENCE ON HEALTHCARE WORKERS’ EFFORT PROPENSITY DURING COMMUNICABLE DISEASE OUTBREAKS IN ONDO STATE

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author POPOOLA-AKINSOLA, OLUSOLA STELLA
dc.date.accessioned 2024-04-19T15:36:59Z
dc.date.available 2024-04-19T15:36:59Z
dc.date.issued 2022-01
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1873
dc.description.abstract Nigeria, like many other countries, has been experiencing outbreak of communicable diseases which necessitates healthcare workers’ effort propensity. Studies conducted among healthcare workers have shown that effort propensity during disease outbreak can be influenced by perception of risk and the safety involved. Previous studies focused on healthcare workers’ demographic characteristics, fear and concerns for self and loved ones as predictors of effort propensity during communicable disease outbreaks, with little attention paid to contextual and dispositional factors. This study was, therefore, designed to investigate the influence of contextual (perceived organisational support and pay satisfaction) and dispositional factors (risk perception, self-efficacy and perceived vulnerability to disease) and the mediating role of resilience on effort propensity during communicable disease outbreaks among healthcare workers in Ondo State. Vroom’s Expectancy Theory and Knoke’s Motivational Model were employed as the framework, while a cross-sectional survey design was utilised. The participants were 477 healthcare workers (289 nurses, 102 doctors, 44 laboratory technologists and 42 pharmacists) purposively sampled based on their prominent contacts with patients and willingness to participate. They were drawn from specialist hospitals in each senatorial district of Ondo State: Akure, Ikare and Okitipupa. A questionnaire that measured perceived organisational support (POS, α = 0.93), pay satisfaction (PS, α = 0.94), risk perception (RP, α = 0.76), self-efficacy (α = 0.88), perceived vulnerability to disease (PVD, α = 0.90), effort propensity (EP, α = 0.71) and resilience (α = 0.82) was administered on the selected healthcare workers. Data were analysed using Hierarchical Multiple Regression and Linear Regression at p ≤ 0.05. The respondents’ age was 31±10.4 years. Age (r = .19), employment duration (r = .24) and PS (r = .31) had significant positive relationship with EP. Risk perception (r = -.58), self-efficacy (r = -.65) and PVD (r = -.59) had significant negative relationship with EP. Age and employment duration (F(2,474) = 14.46; ∆R2 = .06), contextual (F(2,472) = 24.22; ∆R2 = .11) and dispositional factors (F(3,469) = 94.63; ∆R2 = .42) jointly predicted EP, accounting for 59% of its variance. Pay satisfaction (β = .17), RP (β = -.18), self-efficacy (β = -.37) and PVD (β = -.29) significantly predicted EP. Age and employment duration (F(2,474) = 14.89; ∆R2 = .06), contextual (F(2,472) = 13.42, ∆R2 = .04) and dispositional factors (F(3,469) = 49.28, ΔR2 = .32) jointly predicted resilience, accounting for 42% of its variance. Age (β = -.19), RP (β = .20), self-efficacy (β = .32) and PVD (β = .22) significantly predicted resilience. Resilience completely mediated the influence of POS (B = -.10, CI = -.1610; -.0403) and partially mediated the influence of RP (B = -.21, CI = -.3194; -.0983), self-efficacy (B = -.07, CI = - .1519; -.0055) and PVD (B = -.08, CI = -.1209; -.0472) on EP. Perceived organisational support, risk perception, self-efficacy and perceived vulnerability to disease negatively influenced effort propensity of healthcare workers in Ondo State. To reduce effort propensity, healthcare administrators should focus on disposition to work and ensure positive organisational support. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Effort propensity, Healthcare facilities in Ondo State, Disease outbreaks en_US
dc.title INFLUENCE OF CONTEXTUAL AND DISPOSITIONAL FACTORS, AND MEDIATING ROLE OF RESILIENCE ON HEALTHCARE WORKERS’ EFFORT PROPENSITY DURING COMMUNICABLE DISEASE OUTBREAKS IN ONDO STATE en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

Statistics