Personality and job satisfaction among Chinese health practitioners: The mediating role of professional quality of life

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Li, Wendy;Xie, Guojun
Abstract

This study aims to explore mediating effects of professional quality of life on the relationship between big-five personality traits and job satisfaction in a Chinese healthcare setting. A total of 1620 Chinese healthcare professionals were recruited to participate in a randomised cross-sectional survey. The results suggest that professional quality of life transmitted the effect of personality to job satisfaction. Specifically, compassion satisfaction and burnout mediated the positive effect of extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness upon job satisfaction; as well as mediated negative effects of neuroticism upon job satisfaction. Secondary traumatic stress mediated the positive effect of extraversion upon job satisfaction. The paper also discusses the cultural factors contributing to the mediating effects and implications offered by the study at the macro, messo, and micro levels.

Journal

Health Psychology Open

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Volume

7

ISBN/ISSN

2055-1029

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Issue

2

Pages Count

15

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Publisher

SAGE

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Date

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EISSN

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DOI

10.1177/2055102920965053