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Journal Article

Citation

Yragui NL, Demsky CA, Hammer LB, Van Dyck S, Neradilek MB. J. Bus. Psychol. 2017; 32(2): 179-196.

Affiliation

The Mountain-Whisper-Light Statistical Consulting, Seattle, WA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Springer Nature)

DOI

10.1007/s10869-016-9443-z

PMID

29563665

PMCID

PMC5858561

Abstract

PURPOSE: The present study examined the moderating effects of family-supportive supervisor behaviors (FSSB) on the relationship between two types of workplace aggression (i.e., patient-initiated physical aggression and coworker-initiated psychological aggression) and employee well-being and work outcomes.

METHODOLOGY: Data were obtained from a field sample of 417 healthcare workers in two psychiatric hospitals. Hypotheses were tested using moderated multiple regression analyses.

FINDINGS: Psychiatric care providers' perceptions of FSSB moderated the relationship between patient-initiated physical aggression and physical symptoms, exhaustion and cynicism. In addition, FSSB moderated the relationship between coworker-initiated psychological aggression and physical symptoms and turnover intentions. IMPLICATIONS: Based on our findings, family-supportive supervision is a plausible boundary condition for the relationship between workplace aggression and well-being and work outcomes. This study suggests that, in addition to directly addressing aggression prevention and reduction, family-supportive supervision is a trainable resource that healthcare organizations should facilitate to improve employee work and well-being in settings with high workplace aggression. ORIGINALITY: This is the first study to examine the role of FSSB in influencing the relationship between two forms of workplace aggression: patient-initiated physical and coworker- initiated psychological aggression and employee outcomes.


Language: en

Keywords

Conservation of resources theory; Family-supportive supervisor behaviors; Health; Occupational stress; Workplace aggression

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