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Journal of Applied Gerontology
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Exploring the Influence of the Regulatory Survey Process on Nursing Home Administrator Job Satisfaction and Job Seeking

Terry Holecek, Mary Dellmann-Jenkins*, and Dale Curry

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mdellman{at}kent.edu.


   Abstract
Nursing home administrators’ retention rate continues to be a serious problem. One factor potentially affecting administrator turnover that has received minimal research attention is the nursing home regulatory process. Using a random start systematic sample of 135 nursing home administrators, this study explores whether regulatory process perceptions, survey performance (number of deficiency citations on last survey), and demographic or facility variables are associated with job satisfaction and job seeking. Multivariate analyses revealed three main findings: (a) an overall positive perception of the survey process was a significant predictor of administrator job satisfaction and job seeking, (b) survey performance outcomes were not related to administrator job satisfaction, and (c) administrator job seeking was associated with perception of the survey process, performance outcomes, and four factors identified in prior research on staff turnover (type of facility, job tenure, salary, and job satisfaction). Results reinforce ongoing initiatives on retaining quality nursing home leadership.

First published on August 7, 2008
Journal of Applied Gerontology 2008, doi:10.1177/0733464808321886


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