TY - GEN
T1 - Current Status of Exercise Habits and Job Satisfaction of Nurses in Japan
AU - Iwaasa, Takumi
AU - Mizuno, Motoki
AU - Mizuno, Yuki
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Nurses’ duties have become more diversified and increasingly complex with Japan’s ultra-aging population and advancements in medical technology. Additionally, the long working hours, the enormous workload, the chronic shortage of human resources, and night shifts place a huge physical burden on nursing staff. These factors have contributed to a job turnover rate of around 11% for nurses in Japan. The rate has been around the same for the last decade. In a bid to retain highly skilled and talented employees for the long-term and to enable them to demonstrate and build on their skills, there is a need to improve job satisfaction. This study aimed to ascertain the exercise habits of nursing staff and determine how their exercise habits relate to their overall job satisfaction. Methods: A paper-based survey was conducted at a university hospital located in the Tokyo metropolitan area. The survey consisted of a face sheet and questions about respondents’ job satisfaction and exercise habits. Results: Of the total 659 respondents, 304 nurses responded that they had exercised more than once in the last year. There were 40 respondents who had exercised between 1 and 2 times in the last year, 62 respondents said between 6 and 11 times in the last year, and 16 respondents said more than twice a week, with only 5% of respondents saying that they had a regular exercise routine in place. When comparing the average job satisfaction score with exercise frequency, the group that exercised once a week had the highest job satisfaction score of 3.41(SD = 0.37). It was significantly higher than the job satisfaction score (3.19, SD = 0.41) for the group that did not exercise (p <.05).
AB - Nurses’ duties have become more diversified and increasingly complex with Japan’s ultra-aging population and advancements in medical technology. Additionally, the long working hours, the enormous workload, the chronic shortage of human resources, and night shifts place a huge physical burden on nursing staff. These factors have contributed to a job turnover rate of around 11% for nurses in Japan. The rate has been around the same for the last decade. In a bid to retain highly skilled and talented employees for the long-term and to enable them to demonstrate and build on their skills, there is a need to improve job satisfaction. This study aimed to ascertain the exercise habits of nursing staff and determine how their exercise habits relate to their overall job satisfaction. Methods: A paper-based survey was conducted at a university hospital located in the Tokyo metropolitan area. The survey consisted of a face sheet and questions about respondents’ job satisfaction and exercise habits. Results: Of the total 659 respondents, 304 nurses responded that they had exercised more than once in the last year. There were 40 respondents who had exercised between 1 and 2 times in the last year, 62 respondents said between 6 and 11 times in the last year, and 16 respondents said more than twice a week, with only 5% of respondents saying that they had a regular exercise routine in place. When comparing the average job satisfaction score with exercise frequency, the group that exercised once a week had the highest job satisfaction score of 3.41(SD = 0.37). It was significantly higher than the job satisfaction score (3.19, SD = 0.41) for the group that did not exercise (p <.05).
KW - Exercise habit
KW - Japanese nurse
KW - Job satisfaction
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U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-96080-7_34
DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-96080-7_34
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85051743500
SN - 9783319960791
T3 - Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing
SP - 297
EP - 303
BT - Proceedings of the 20th Congress of the International Ergonomics Association (IEA 2018) - Volume IV
A2 - Bagnara, Sebastiano
A2 - Alexander, Thomas
A2 - Fujita, Yushi
A2 - Tartaglia, Riccardo
A2 - Albolino, Sara
PB - Springer Verlag
T2 - 20th Congress of the International Ergonomics Association, IEA 2018
Y2 - 26 August 2018 through 30 August 2018
ER -