Organisational justice is one of the important
factors that affect the job satisfaction and motivation of employees based on
Adams’ “equity theory”. It is possible to propound that the performance of
personnel increase within the organisations where distributive, interactional
and procedural justice function properly. This study aims at examining the
effect of medical personnel working in primary health care services on
organisational justice perception and job satisfaction.
In the study, a t-test was used as a
statistical analysis to check if the two independent samples had different
averages from a given variable. Anova test was used to determine the difference
in averages of two or more groups. Separate frequency tests were conducted for
each question used in the survey in order to determine the consistency of
answers. Correlation analysis was applied to
determine whether there is a linear relationship between two
numerical measurements and if so, the direction and intensity
of this relationship.
In the study, two different scales were used as
a data collection tool. These are “Minnesota Satisfaction Questionnaire” and
“Organisational Justice Questionnaire”. Besides, some questions were asked in
an attempt to analyse socio-demographic variants of participants. As a result
of the study, it is seen that there is a significant relationship between job
and gender, and education and job satisfaction scale average.
Primary Language | Turkish |
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Subjects | Health Care Administration |
Journal Section | Basic Science Research Articles |
Authors | |
Publication Date | June 30, 2019 |
Acceptance Date | June 27, 2019 |
Published in Issue | Year 2019 |