# A study on the relationship between work stress and turnover intentions among critical care nurses: mediating roles of job satisfaction and burnout

**Authors:** Yunfan Ji, Wei Hu, Di Xu, Fengzhi Chai, Yuhong Wang, Caiyue Xu, Xia Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2026.1744177 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2026-01-21

## TL;DR

This study explores how work stress affects critical care nurses' desire to leave their jobs, with job satisfaction and burnout playing key roles in the process.

## Contribution

The study identifies the mediating roles of job satisfaction and burnout in the relationship between work stress and turnover intention among critical care nurses.

## Key findings

- Work stress is strongly linked to higher turnover intention and burnout, and lower job satisfaction.
- Job satisfaction and burnout mediate 56.56% of the effect of work stress on turnover intention.
- The structural equation model showed a good fit, confirming the proposed relationships among the variables.

## Abstract

Nursing staff shortages and the loss of nursing talent resources remain persistent global challenges. Work stress, job satisfaction, and occupational burnout are key factors influencing nursing staff turnover intentions. Examining the interrelationships among these four variables can provide deeper insights into turnover issues among critical care nurses.

To examine the relationship between work stress and turnover intention among nurses in intensive care units. Additionally, this study aims to explore the mediating roles of occupational burnout and job satisfaction, thereby investigating the underlying mechanisms linking work stress, job satisfaction, occupational burnout, and turnover intention within the nursing population.

A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 257 intensive care unit nurses. Study variables included job stress, job satisfaction, occupational burnout, and turnover intention. Key data underwent bivariate Spearman correlation analysis and mediation analysis using SPSS 27.0 and R 4.4.2.

Job stress was negatively correlated with job satisfaction (r = −0.704, p < 0.01) and positively correlated with burnout (r = 0.616, p < 0.01) and turnover intention (r = 0.758, p < 0.01). Job satisfaction significantly negatively influenced turnover intention (r = −0.742, p < 0.01), while occupational burnout significantly positively influenced turnover intention (r = 0.663, p < 0.01). The structural equation model demonstrated good fit (χ2/df = 2.55; CFI = 0.93, TLI = 0.92; RMSEA = 0.077). Job stress significantly and directly influenced turnover intention (β = 0.23, p = 0.003), while job satisfaction (β = 0.098, 95% CI: 0.046–0.153) and occupational burnout (β = 0.083, 95% CI: 0.045–0.132) concurrently mediated the relationship between job stress and turnover intention. In the overall effect of work pressure on turnover intention, indirect effects (through job satisfaction and burnout) collectively account for 56.56%, while direct effects account for 43.44%.

This study examined the relationship between job stress and turnover intention, as well as the direct and indirect effects of enhancing job satisfaction and reducing occupational burnout on lowering nurses’ turnover intention. It provides theoretical foundations and practical implications for mitigating nurse turnover issues.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** burnout (MESH:D002055)

## Full text

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## References

49 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12868260/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12868260