The Relationship Between CDC Personnel Subjective Socioeconomic Status and Turnover Intention: A Combined Model of Moderation and Mediation

A stable and motivated CDC workforce is critical for Chinese public health system improvement in the post-pandemic period of COVID-19. Meanwhile, the lack of career development prospects, low income, low status and the widespread and increasingly serious job burnout of employees CDC staff is a compl...

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Published inFrontiers in psychiatry Vol. 13; p. 908844
Main Authors Shan, Ying, Liu, Guangwen, Zhou, Changqiang, Li, Shixue
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Media S.A 22.06.2022
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Summary:A stable and motivated CDC workforce is critical for Chinese public health system improvement in the post-pandemic period of COVID-19. Meanwhile, the lack of career development prospects, low income, low status and the widespread and increasingly serious job burnout of employees CDC staff is a complex and difficult problem for the government. Therefore, this study explored the relationship between CDC personnel subjective socioeconomic status and turnover intention using a sample of 2,502 grass-roots CDC personnel who were administered with a subjective socioeconomic status scale, turnover intention scale, job burnout scale, and payment questionnaire. The results showed that: (1) subjective socioeconomic status had a significant association with job burnout and turnover intention; (2) all three dimensions of job burnout played a mediating role in the relationship between subjective socioeconomic status and turnover intention; (3) expected salary change played a moderating role between subjective socioeconomic status and turnover intention. The effect was stronger for workers with low expected salary change, which means due to the multidimensional comparative and complex mechanism of salary change, which had limited effect on turnover intention. These findings provide a basis for the relationship between turnover intention and socioeconomic status of grass-roots CDC personnel, and also provide ideas for reducing job burnout and staff turnover.
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This article was submitted to Public Mental Health, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychiatry
Edited by: María del Mar Molero, University of Almeria, Spain
Reviewed by: Sitong Chen, Victoria University, Australia; Tao Sun, Hangzhou Normal University, China
ISSN:1664-0640
1664-0640
DOI:10.3389/fpsyt.2022.908844