The personality profile of IPS employment specialists, and how it relates to job satisfaction: A longitudinal cohort study
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26881Dato
2022-08-23Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Butenko, Daniil; Rinaldi, Miles; Brinchmann, Beate; Brandseth, Oda Lekve; Killackey, Eoin; Mykletun, ArnsteinSammendrag
The role of the Individual Placement and Support (IPS) employment specialist is a new type of occupation within mental healthcare. High turnover among
employment specialists necessitates improvement in their recruitment and retention. One element that impacts retention is job satisfaction. We assessed the
personality of 38 employment specialists (Big 5 Inventory-2) and measured job satisfaction over three time periods. Compared to norm data, employment
specialists were significantly higher on Extraversion (ΔT = 8.0, CI: 5.59–10.42), Agreeableness (ΔT = 7.8, CI: 5.56–10.12), Conscientiousness (ΔT = 3.3,
CI: 0.8–5.84), Open-mindedness (ΔT = 3.5, CI: 0.97–6.07), while lower on Negative emotionality (ΔT = -3.5, CI: -6.5 to -0.42). Extraversion had a
substantial longitudinal positive effect on job satisfaction (β at T1 = 0.39; CI: 0.10–0.73) (β at T2 = 0.40; CI: 0.03–0.80), while Negative emotionality – a
substantial negative effect (β at T1 = -0.60; CI: -0.90 to -0.30) (β at T2 = -0.50; CI: -0.90 to -0.12). Male gender was significantly associated with
higher job satisfaction at the time point 1 (β =-0.46; CI: -0.80 to -0.14). Age, length of employment in the role, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness and
Open-mindedness were not found to have substantial significant effects on job satisfaction of employment specialists. Recruiting employment specialists
who score high on Extraversion and low on Negative emotionality may be a good fit for the role and job satisfaction.
Forlag
WileySitering
Butenko, Rinaldi, Brinchmann, Brandseth, Killackey, Mykletun. The personality profile of IPS employment specialists, and how it relates to job satisfaction: A longitudinal cohort study. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology. 2022Metadata
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