Determining Mobbing Perceptions and Job Satisfaction among Healthcare Professionals
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Aim: This study has been carried out as definitive to determine job satisfaction and mobbing perception of health care workers. Method: Three hundred and ninety healthcare professionals were enrolled in the study. Study data were collected with a personal information form, mobbing perceptional scale, and the Minnesota Job Satisfaction Scale. In the analysis of the data, percentage distribution, the Mann-Whitney U, Kruskal Wallis Variance Analysis and Pearson's correlation analysis tests were used. Results: It has been determined % 57.5 of health care workers are exposed to mobbing and 32.8% of physicians, of 41.1 % of the and technicians 56.3 % of midwives who exposed to mobbing did not do anything in this case but only 33.8 % of nurses shared this with their friends. % 92 of health care workers stated that mobbing affects job satisfaction negatively. It has been determined that there is a strong relationship between mobbing perception and job satisfaction of health care workers and job satisfaction has been found to decrease with increasing perception of mobbing (r=-.40, p=0.00). Conclusion: It has been stated that more than half of health care workers are exposed to mobbing and mobbing affects job satisfaction of health care workers negatively.