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Relationship between hospital pharmacists’ job satisfaction and involvement in clinical activities
54
Citations
7
References
1996
Year
NursingFamily MedicineJob SatisfactionMail QuestionnaireClinical PharmacyAllied Health ProfessionsOutcomes ResearchClinical ActivitiesPharmaceutical EducationPharmaceutical CareMedicinePatient SatisfactionHealth Services ResearchHospital PharmacistsHospital Medicine
Job satisfaction among hospital pharmacists employed by a national hospital pharmacy management company was measured by using a mail questionnaire. A previously validated survey that measured pharmacists' job satisfaction was adapted for use in this study. Additional questions determined the pharmacist's clinical pharmacy training and participation in clinical pharmacy services. Questionnaires were mailed to all full-time hospital pharmacists employed by the pharmacy management company. Of the 606 mailed, deliverable questionnaires, 354 usable responses were returned, for a response rate of 58.4%. The respondent hospital pharmacists' level of job satisfaction showed a positive association with clinical pharmacy involvement. Of the nine items in the questionnaire that measured the pharmacists' involvement in clinical pharmacy services, seven items showed a positive relationship between involvement in that clinical activity and job satisfaction. Mean job satisfaction increased as the percentage of time spent performing clinical pharmacy activities increased. Job satisfaction decreased as time spent performing distributive functions increased. The percentage of time hospital pharmacists were engaged in clinical activities was significantly associated with job satisfaction.
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