Abstract:
Background: Professional commitment is beyond a commitment for a particular organization and implies the
individuals‟ perspective towards their profession and the motivation that they have to stay in their job which
refers to one‟s loyalty to the profession and the willingness to strive and uphold the values and goals of the
profession to maintain membership in that profession. There is a general conviction that professional
commitment of health workforce has a positive and significant impact upon business performance and reform
process of health system. The quality and effectiveness of health systems critically depends on the size, skills
and commitment of the health workforce. In Ethiopia, the National, regional (Oromia) and Zonal (Jimma) level
of family planning and ANC coverage were in good status but uptake of institutional delivery service (IDS)
coverage was still low. In Oromia region, IDS utilization is about 13%, which is lower than the national level
(16%). The health sector is struggling to bring change by exerting its effort on these constraints/determinants of
IDS utilization from the client and service coverage perspective but the level of professional commitment and
associated factors of health professionals‟ was not studied yet.
Objective: To assess the level of professional commitment of health professionals‟ and associated factors in
government health facilities of Jimma zone, Oromia, Southwest Ethiopia, 2016.
Methods: A facility based cross-sectional study design employing both quantitative and qualitative methods
was conducted from March 01-20, 2016. A sample of 442 health professionals were included from the randomly
selected 7 Woredas and Jimma town within respective 47 health facilities that fulfill inclusion criteria, and 20
health managers were selected purposively from selected health facilities,woreda health offices and zonal
health department for in-depth interview. All eligible health professionals from the health facilities were
requested to fill self-administered questioner. Finally, after checking its completeness, the data was entered in
to EPI data version 3.1 and exported to SPSS version 20 for statistical analysis. Factor analysis was conducted
to identify the measurement scales and factor scores that were used in both simple (P<0.25) and multiple linear
regressions (P<0.05). Finally, the finding was presented using graphs, tables, narratives and descriptive
numerical summary. Qualitative data was collected using key-informant interviews to support the findings from
the quantitative survey by thematic analysis technique.
Results: The response rate of this study was 93.21%. The percentage mean score of professional commitment
for health professionals working in government health facilities of Jimma zone was 72.71 % (SD21.88). The
raw mean score of this scale was 39.08± 8.8 with a total rotated variance explained 61.22%. The percentages
mean score for perceived maternal health goal scale was 68.37% with the total variance explained 69.68%.
This study found that perceived staff interaction, perceived work-life balance, affective organizational
commitment, normative organizational commitment, personal characteristics and perceived maternal health
goal as independent predictors of professional commitment.
Conclusion: In this investigation, the percentage mean score of professional commitment of health
professionals working in government health facilities of Jimma zone was medium. Hence, we recommend health
managers to communicate and update the new maternal health goal (SDG) as well as Professionals‟ should be
committed to their organization and consider their personal characterstics having balanced worklife time to
foster a more high level of professional commitment among health professionals in government health facilities
of Jimma zone to increase uptake of institutional delivery services.