Behavioral dysregulation at work: A moderated mediation analysis of sleep impairment, work-related stress, and substance use.

IF 2.7 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
AIMS Public Health Pub Date : 2025-03-12 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3934/publichealth.2025018
Francesco Marcatto, Donatella Ferrante, Mateusz Paliga, Edanur Kanbur, Nicola Magnavita
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Sleep impairment and work-related stress are common issues that influence employee well-being and organizational outcomes. Impaired sleep depletes cognitive and emotional resources, increasing stress and the likelihood of counterproductive work behaviors directed toward the organization (CWB-O). This cross-sectional study, guided by the conservation of resources (COR) theory, explores the relationships between impaired sleep, work-related stress, and CWB-O, considering substance use as a dysfunctional coping strategy.

Methods: A sample of 302 Italian employees completed an online survey. Sleep impairment was assessed using the Insomnia Severity Index, work-related stress was assessed with the Perceived Stress Scale, CWB-O was assessed with the Counterproductive Work Behavior Checklist, and substance use as a coping strategy was assessed using the Brief COPE. A moderated mediation model was tested to examine the indirect effects of sleep impairment on CWB-O via work-related stress, with substance use moderating both the sleep-stress and stress-CWB-O relationships.

Results: The results supported the hypothesis that the relationship between sleep impairment and CWB-O is mediated by work-related stress. Sleep difficulties significantly increased work-related stress, which in turn led to higher levels of CWB-O. Substance use did not moderate the relationship between sleep and work-related stress. It did, however, significantly moderate the relationship between work-related stress and CWB-O, with higher levels of substance use amplifying the impact of stress on behavioral dysregulation.

Conclusion: This study contributes to our understanding of how impaired sleep, work-related stress, and substance use interact to influence deviant behaviors at work. The findings align with COR theory, highlighting the role of resource depletion and dysfunctional coping in workplace behavior, and suggest that organizational interventions should also consider programs aimed at improving sleep quality and addressing substance use to reduce the likelihood of deviant behaviors at work.

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工作中的行为失调:睡眠障碍、工作压力和物质使用的适度中介分析。
背景:睡眠障碍和工作压力是影响员工幸福感和组织成果的常见问题。受损的睡眠会消耗认知和情感资源,增加压力和对组织产生反生产行为的可能性(CWB-O)。本横断面研究在资源保护理论的指导下,探讨了睡眠障碍、工作压力和CWB-O之间的关系,并将物质使用视为一种功能失调的应对策略。方法:对302名意大利员工进行在线调查。使用失眠严重程度指数评估睡眠障碍,使用感知压力量表评估工作压力,使用反生产行为检查表评估CWB-O,使用Brief COPE评估物质使用作为应对策略。通过一个调节的中介模型来检验睡眠障碍通过工作压力对CWB-O的间接影响,物质使用调节睡眠压力和压力-CWB-O的关系。结果:研究结果支持睡眠障碍与CWB-O之间存在工作压力介导关系的假设。睡眠困难会显著增加工作压力,从而导致更高水平的CWB-O。物质使用并没有缓和睡眠和工作压力之间的关系。然而,它确实显著地缓和了工作压力和CWB-O之间的关系,较高水平的物质使用放大了压力对行为失调的影响。结论:这项研究有助于我们理解睡眠受损、工作压力和物质使用如何相互作用,影响工作中的异常行为。研究结果与COR理论一致,强调了资源消耗和功能失调应对在工作场所行为中的作用,并建议组织干预还应考虑旨在改善睡眠质量和解决物质使用问题的计划,以减少工作中异常行为的可能性。
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来源期刊
AIMS Public Health
AIMS Public Health HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
审稿时长
4 weeks
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