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- Title
The psychological contract: is the UK National Health Service a model employer?
- Authors
Fielden, Sandra; Whiting, Fiona
- Abstract
The UK National Health Service (NHS) is facing recruitment challenges that mean it will need to become an 'employer of choice' if it is to continue to attract high-quality employees. This paper reports the findings from a study focusing on allied health professional staff (n = 67), aimed at establishing the expectations of the NHS inherent in their current psychological contract and to consider whether the government's drive to make the NHS a model employer meets those expectations. The findings show that the most important aspects of the psychological contract were relational and based on the investment made in the employment relationship by both parties. The employment relationship was one of high involvement but also one where transactional contract items, such as pay, were still of some importance. Although the degree of employee satisfaction with the relational content of the psychological contract was relatively positive, there was, nevertheless, a mismatch between levels of importance placed on such aspects of the contract and levels of satisfaction, with employees increasingly placing greater emphasis on those items the NHS is having the greatest difficulty providing. Despite this apparent disparity between employee expectation and the fulfilment of those expectations, the overall health of the psychological contract was still high.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; EMPLOYEE recruitment; MEDICAL personnel; MEDICAL care; PUBLIC health; GREAT Britain. National Health Service
- Publication
Health Services Management Research, 2007, Vol 20, Issue 2, p94
- ISSN
0951-4848
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1258/095148407780744642