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Community Dental Health

Cover Date
March 2009
Print ISSN
0265 539X
Electronic ISSN
Vol
26
Issue
1

Articles from this issue

TitlePage StartPage EndD.O.I.
Editorial - Closing the gap in a generation: Health equity through action on the social determinants of health. A Report of the WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health (CSDH) 2008. 2 3 10.1922/CDH_2500Sheiham02
Thanks to Referees 4 4
Predictive tool for estimating the potential effect of water fluoridation on dental caries 5 11 10.1922/CDH_2352Tickle07
Dental caries prevalence and distribution among preschoolers in Singapore 12 17 10.1922/CDH_2267Hsu06
Oral health in German children, adolescents, adults and senior citizens in 2005 18 22 10.1922/CDH_2392Schiffner05
Caries prevalence and fluoride use in low SES children in Clermont-Ferrand (France) 23 28 10.1922/CDH_2226Jeannin06
Previous radiographic experience of children referred for dental extractions under general anaesthesia in the UK. 29 31 10.1922/CDH_2232Rodd03
The prevalence of dental caries and fissure sealants in 12 year old children by disadvantaged status in Dublin (Ireland). 32 37 10.1922/CDH_2261Sagheri06
Childhood growth and dental caries 38 42 10.1922/CDH_2225Mohammadi05
Measurement of attitudes of UK dental practitioners to core job constructs. 43 51 10.1922/CDH_2294Harris09
Dental general anaesthesia - will the service disappear? A pilot study 52 57 10.1922/CDH_2150Milsom06
Orthodontic treatment need and oral health-related quality among children 58 61 10.1922/CDH_2245Zhang04
Short Communication - Changing dental caries levels in the 1980’s, 1990’s and 2005 among children of a Jerusalem region. 62 64 10.1922/CDH_2291SganCohen03


Measurement of attitudes of UK dental practitioners to core job constructs.


Article Price £10.00
Page Start
43
Page End
51
D.O.I.
10.1922/CDH_2294Harris09
Authors
  • R.V. Harris
  • A. Ashcroft
  • G. Burnside
  • J.M. Dancer
  • D. Smith
  • B. Grieveson

Abstract

Objectives: To develop a measure to identify dental practitioner attitudes towards core job dimensions relating to job satisfaction and motivation and to test this against practice characteristics and provider attributes of UK practitioners Research design: an 83-item questionnaire was developed from open-ended interviews with practitioners and use of items in previously used dentist job satisfaction questionnaires. This was subsequently sent to 684 practitioners. Item analysis reduced the item pool to 40 items and factor analysis (PCA) was undertaken. Results: 440 (64%) dentists responded. Factor analysis resulted in six factors being identified as distinguishable job dimensions, overall Cronbach’s alpha = 0.88. The factors were: ‘restriction in being able to provide quality care (F1)’, ‘respect from being a dentist (F2)’, ‘control of work (F3)’, ‘running a practice (F4)’, ‘clinical skills (F5)’, and ‘caring for patients (F6)’. All six factors were correlated with a global job satisfaction score, although F1 was most strongly related (r=0.60). Regression model analysis revealed that ‘whether the dentist worked within the National Health Service or wholly or partly in the private sector’ (p<0.001), ‘time since qualification’ (p=0.009), and the position of the dentist within the practice (whether a practice owner or associate dentist), (p=0.047) were predictive of this factor. Conclusions: Six core job constructs of UK practitioners have been identified, together with several practice characteristics and practitioner attributes which predict these factors. The study demonstrates the importance of refining measures of dentists’ job satisfaction to take account of the culture and the system in which the practitioner works.

Keywords: Financing, job motivation, job satisfaction, quality.


Editorial correspondence and enquires:

Professor D O'Mullane
c/o Ms Colette Spicer
The Editorial Assistant
Oral Health Research Services Centre
University Dental School & Hospital
Wilton, Cork
Ireland.
e-mail: cdh@ucc.ie

Publisher correspondence and enquires:

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