This is the final version as it appears for the citation: Haglin, Kathryn, Soren Jordan, Alison Higgins Merrill, and Joseph Daniel Ura. 2021. "Ideology and Specific Support for the Supreme Court." Political Research Quarterly 74 (4): 955-969. DOI:10.1177/1065912920950482 Corresponding author: Joseph Daniel Ura (jura@tamu.edu).
This is the final version as it appears for the citation: Haglin, Kathryn, Soren Jordan, Alison Higgins Merrill, and Joseph Daniel Ura. 2021. "Ideology and Specific Support for the Supreme Court." Political Research Quarterly 74 (4): 955-969. DOI:10.1177/1065912920950482 The page numbers here are consistent with the published version. Corresponding author: Joseph Daniel Ura (jura@tamu.edu)
Astin Cole,1 Haneen Ali,2 Abdulaziz Ahmed,3 Mohammad Hamasha,4 Soren Jordan5 1Public Administration, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, USA; 2Health Services Administration Program, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, USA; 3Health Services Administration Program, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA; 4Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Hashemite University, Zarqa, Jordan; 5Department of Political Science, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, USACorrespondence: Haneen AliHealth Services Administration Program, Auburn University, 351 W Thach Concourse, 7080 Haley Center, Auburn, AL, 36849, USAEmail hba0007@auburn.eduIntroduction: Current research about frontline nurse stress and turnover intention lacks context related to rural communities' plight in providing organizational resources during the current COVID-19 pandemic. These implications have been particularly underexamined in the United States, whose regional differences may influence how frontline nurses perceive the access and utility of organizational resources. This study investigates if anxiety and stress while working during the current COVID-19 pandemic contribute to frontline nurses' desire to leave their current position in Alabama hospital settings.Material and Methods: A cross-sectional survey was developed and distributed as a Qualtrics survey to frontline nurses using social media and professional contacts. A total of 111 frontline nurse respondents within May 19–June 12, 2020 were included in this study.Results: A significant correlation was found between gender (p= 0.002), marital status (p= 0.000) and seniority (p= 0.049) on turnover intention. A nurse's perceived anxiety and stress related to their patients' acuity (r= 0.257, p= 0.004), their personal health as a risk factor (r= 0.507, p= 0.000), their patient assignments (r= 0.239, p= 0.01), their personal protective equipment (r= 0.412, p= 0.000), and their psychological support (r= 0.316, p= 0.001) correspond to higher turnover intention among nurses working with patients infected with COVID-19.Conclusion: Perceived resource loss in task autonomy, PPE, and psychosocial support increased turnover intention among frontline nurses in Alabama. Research is needed to understand how intrinsic motivations and social support influence individual nurse staff's perceptions of resource loss and job demands. Further, more research is necessary to examine the implications of rurality and place in discussing turnover intention and organizational resources across multiple health systems.Keywords: pandemic, COVID-19, nurse stress, fear, job demand, organizational resources, turnover intention
In: Political research quarterly: PRQ ; official journal of the Western Political Science Association and other associations, Band 74, Heft 4, S. 955-969
We develop and assess an account of ideological asymmetries in public support for the Supreme Court. We find that specific support for the Supreme Court is more strongly negatively related to perceptions that the Court is overly liberal than perceptions that the Court is overly conservative. Our findings provide a more complete theoretical account of dynamics in specific support for the Supreme Court and indicate a mechanism behind the recent decline in the Supreme Court's public standing.