Relationships between work outcomes, work attitudes and work environments of health support workers in Ontario long-term care and home and community care settings.
Whitney B BertaAudrey LaporteTyrone PerreiraLiane GinsburgAdrian Rohit DassRaisa DeberAndrea BaumannLisa CranleyIvy BourgeaultJanet LumBrenda GambleKathryn PilkingtonVinita HarounPaula NevesPublished in: Human resources for health (2018)
HSWs' work environments are within the power of managers to modify. Our analysis suggests that QWL, perceptions of supervisor support, and perceptions of workplace safety present particularly promising means by which to influence HSWs' work attitudes and work outcomes. Furthermore, even modest changes to some aspects of the work environment stand to precipitate a cascade of positive effects on work outcomes through work attitudes.