I Trust You: Does This Matter in the Relationship between Sexual Harassment, Continuous Commitment and Intention to Leave among Young Female Healthcare Professionals?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Theoretical Framework and Hypotheses Building
2.1. Sexual Harassment and Trust in Superiors
2.2. Sexual Harassment and Intention to Leave among Young Female Doctors
2.3. Trust in Superiors and Continuous Commitment among Young Female Doctors
2.4. Trust in Superiors and Intention to Leave among Young Female Doctors
2.5. The Role of Trust in Superiors in the Relationship between Sexual Harassment and Continuous Commitment and Intention to Leave
3. Methodology
3.1. Data Collection
3.2. The Research Instrument
3.3. Data Analysis
3.4. The Reliability of Measurements
- The communities indicating the information quality of the starting variable, which are restored by the factor/s, obtained at the end of the analysis. In other words, the part of the variable explained by the factors used.
- The percentage of variance returned by factors; in some studies, the threshold of satisfaction is fixed a priori in terms of percentage of variance explained. It is consequently appropriate to hold the number of factors necessary to reach this threshold.
- Factorial contributions: the quality of analysis is evaluated also at the level of each variable by examining the factor loading.
- Kaiser’s criterion: If the starting point of the analysis is a correlation matrix, the classic Kaiser’s criterion consists in holding the factors whose eigenvalue is more than one. On the contrary, if it comes to a variance–covariance matrix, one can use Kaiser’s criterion to exclusively hold those factors, which represent more than 1/p% of the total variance; p is the number of affirmations on the scale. We shall also examine the KMO test to discover whether our sample is appropriate or not for the PCA, or simply to answer the question about the fact that our data are factorable or not.
3.5. The Structural Equations Modelling Results
4. Discussion and Implication
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Measured Variable | Authors | Number of Items |
---|---|---|
Sexual harassment | Gharbi and Sobaih [30] | 13 |
Trust in the direct superior | Tyler and Degoey [31] | 8 |
Continuous commitment | Meyer and Allen [32] | 6 |
Intention to leave | Colle et al. [33] | 6 |
Factors and Items | Loading | T-Value | M | S. D | Properties |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sexual Harassment Gharbi and Sobaih, [30] (α = 0.940) | CR = 0.946 AVE = 0.689 MSV = 0.549 | ||||
I did not want to change my supervisor because my career would be over | 0.68 | F | 3.28 | 1.498 | |
I feel compelled to continue with the same supervisor because I think that no one else would accept me | 0.91 | 14.372 | 3.72 | 1.263 | |
My supervisor sees me more as a woman than a colleague or future colleague | 0.81 | 13.001 | 3.82 | 1.230 | |
My supervisor understands my friendly behavior as a sign of sexual availability | 0.95 | 15.006 | 3.87 | 1.287 | |
My supervisor tells me daring jokes with sexual overtones | 0.90 | 14.260 | 3.72 | 1.368 | |
My supervisor is showing more and more interest in matters concerning my way of dressing | 0.89 | 14.960 | 3.67 | 1.338 | |
My supervisor abuses me through phone calls | 0.75 | 12.899 | 3.68 | 1.328 | |
My supervisor chooses a spatial proximity, during my supervision, deemed unnecessary | 0.71 | 11.557 | 3.71 | 1.308 | |
Trust Tyler and Degoey, [31] (α = 0.951) My supervisor …….. | CR = 0.949 AVE = 0.702 MSV = 0.305 | ||||
Behave honestly with me | 0.86 | F | 3.32 | 1.499 | |
is fair to me and shows it to me | 0.85 | 19.992 | 3.21 | 1.485 | |
Try her best to be fair to me | 0.89 | 22.195 | 3.35 | 1.495 | |
Never cheat | 0.80 | 17.884 | 3.22 | 1.551 | |
Try to be fair and upright to me | 0.90 | 19.987 | 3.45 | 1.510 | |
Is sensitive to my present and future needs | 0.81 | 18.471 | 3.26 | 1.651 | |
Is frank | 0.71 | 14.832 | 3.32 | 1.449 | |
Communicate to me frankly the reasons for his decisions | 0.87 | 21.194 | 3.31 | 1.455 | |
Continuous commitment Meyer and Allen, [32] (α = 0.855) | CR = 0.859 AVE = 0.713 MSV = 0.349 | ||||
It would be very difficult for me to leave this department at this time, even if I wanted to | 0.78 | F | 3.14 | 1.480 | |
A lot of things in my life would be disrupted if I decided to leave this department now | 0.83 | 15.037 | 3.26 | 1.394 | |
At the moment, staying in this department is a problem that is as much a necessity as a desire | 0.81 | 19.391 | 3.91 | 1.194 | |
I think I have too few options to consider leaving this service | 0.83 | 23.163 | 3.56 | 1.292 | |
One of the negative consequences of my leaving this service would be the lack of possible alternatives | 0.93 | 15.037 | 3.56 | 1.399 | |
If I hadn’t given so much of myself to this service, I might have considered working elsewhere | 0.88 | 13.694 | 3.74 | 1.196 | |
The Intention to Leave Colle et al. [33] (α = 0.939) | CR = 0.937 AVE = 0.725 MSV = 0.582 | ||||
I believe that I will continue to work in my current company in the future | 0.78 | F | 3.49 | 1.331 | |
I am thinking about leaving my job in my company | 0.83 | 15.037 | 3.62 | 1.308 | |
Currently, I am not actively looking for a job outside my company | 0.81 | 19.391 | 3.73 | 1.267 | |
I am seriously thinking about leaving my job | 0.83 | 23.163 | 3.38 | 1.311 | |
As soon as I find a more interesting job, I will leave my company | 0.93 | 15.037 | 3.40 | 1.427 | |
I do not intend to leave my company in the near future | 0.88 | 13.694 | 3.64 | 1.270 |
Sexual Harassment | Trust in Superiors | Continuous Commitment | Intention to Leave | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sexual Harassment | 0.830 * | |||
Trust | 0.566 | 0.838 * | ||
Continuous Commitment | 0.423 | 0.565 | 0.713 * | |
Intention To leave | 0.318 | 0.313 | 0.633 | 0.725 * |
Variables | Beta (β) | C.R. (T Value) | Results |
---|---|---|---|
SHAR TRUST | −0.020 | −0.330 | Not supported |
TRUST CC | −0.313 *** | −5.933 | Supported |
SHAR INTL | 0.318 *** | 6.595 | Supported |
TRUST INTL | −0.080 *** | −3.571 | Supported |
SHAR TRUST CC | Path 1: β = −0.020 Path 2: β = −0.313 *** | Path 1: t-value = −0.330 Path 2: t-value = −5.933 | Not supported |
SHAR TRUST INTL | Path 1: β = −0.020 Path 2: β = −0.080 *** | Path 1: t-value = −0.330 Path 2: t-value = 3.571 | Not supported |
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Gharbi, H.; Aliane, N.; Sobaih, A.E.E. I Trust You: Does This Matter in the Relationship between Sexual Harassment, Continuous Commitment and Intention to Leave among Young Female Healthcare Professionals? Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 2843. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052843
Gharbi H, Aliane N, Sobaih AEE. I Trust You: Does This Matter in the Relationship between Sexual Harassment, Continuous Commitment and Intention to Leave among Young Female Healthcare Professionals? International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(5):2843. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052843
Chicago/Turabian StyleGharbi, Hassane, Nadir Aliane, and Abu Elnasr E. Sobaih. 2022. "I Trust You: Does This Matter in the Relationship between Sexual Harassment, Continuous Commitment and Intention to Leave among Young Female Healthcare Professionals?" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 5: 2843. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052843
APA StyleGharbi, H., Aliane, N., & Sobaih, A. E. E. (2022). I Trust You: Does This Matter in the Relationship between Sexual Harassment, Continuous Commitment and Intention to Leave among Young Female Healthcare Professionals? International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(5), 2843. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052843