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RESEARCH PRODUCT
How work and family caregiving responsibilities interplay and affect registered dietitian nutritionists and their work: A national survey.
Emily Vaterlaus PattenKarla WilliamsDennis L. Eggettsubject
MaleFamily ConflictEconomicsSocial SciencesBurnoutSurveys0302 clinical medicineSociologySurveys and QuestionnairesMedicine and Health SciencesPsychology030212 general & internal medicineElder careHuman FamiliesBurnout ProfessionalMultidisciplinary05 social sciencesQRMiddle AgedProfessionsWork (electrical)CaregiversResearch DesignMedicineJob satisfactionFemalePsychologyResearch ArticleEmploymentAdultPolitical ScienceHealth PersonnelSciencePsychological StressAffect (psychology)Research and Analysis MethodsJob Satisfaction03 medical and health sciencesNursing0502 economics and businessMental Health and PsychiatryHumansFamilyNutritionistsNutritionAgedLabor StudiesSurvey ResearchLife satisfactionBiology and Life SciencesUnited StatesDietHealth CareLabor EconomicsPeople and PlacesRegistered dietitianPopulation GroupingsSurvey instrumentDelivery of Health Care050203 business & managementdescription
Healthcare professionals provide paid care at work and potentially have caregiving responsibilities outside of work; work responsibilities in addition to child and/or elder care is considered double- or triple-duty care. Employees may experience conflict and/or enrichment as their work and family responsibilities interface. This study’s purpose is to explore the work and family interface of Registered Dietitian Nutritionists (RDNs), determine the prevalence of work-family conflict and enrichment, and identify characteristics associated with higher work-family conflict and enrichment scores. A survey instrument assessing caregiving responsibilities and work-family conflict and enrichment was distributed electronically to 4,900 RDNs throughout the United States. Frequencies, means, correlative relationships, and ANCOVA were calculated using SAS software 9.04. Of 1,233 usable responses, nearly two-thirds of RDNs (65.5%) reported providing either double-duty or triple-duty care. About half of RDNs (47.2%) reported work-family conflict and fewer (14.8%) reported family-work conflict. Additionally, most RDNs (79.4%) reported work-family enrichment and even more (85.2%) reported family-work enrichment. Higher work-family conflict scores had correlative relationships with higher levels of burnout, lower life satisfaction, and higher intent to quit. Higher work-family enrichment scores had correlative relationships with lower burnout, higher job satisfaction, higher career satisfaction, higher life satisfaction, and lower intent to quit. Understanding the unpaid caregiving responsibilities of RDNs and the interface of work/family responsibilities may provide insight into career planning for RDNs and guide managers of RDNs in efforts to amplify the contribution of RDNs.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021-03-01 | PLoS ONE |