Ability and motivation profiles among chronically ill employees: using latent profile analysis to understand the impact of utilization HR practices on work engagement.
Silvia Profili, Alessia Sammarra, Laura Innocenti, Luca Merlo, Riccardo Peccei
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
As chronic illnesses affect more employees, organizations must understand how to support these workers to retain their value and promote well-being. This study draws on the job demands-resources model and conservation of resources theory to examine how ability and motivation shape the engagement of chronically ill employees (CIEs) in response to HR practices that help them recover functioning after a loss (i.e. utilization practices). It also investigates whether perceived illness discrimination moderates this relationship across CIEs subgroups. Survey data from 663 CIEs in an Italian company were analysed using latent profile analysis, identifying three groups: 'thriving employees' (high ability/motivation), 'steady contributors' (moderate ability/motivation), and 'struggling workers' (low ability/motivation). Multi-group SEM showed that utilization practices increased engagement for thriving employees and steady contributors, but not among struggling workers. Perceived illness discrimination weakened this positive effect for steady contributors and struggling workers. By adopting a person-centred approach, the study reveals patterns that would not emerge from traditional variable-based analyses, offering practical guidance for organizations aiming to build more inclusive workplaces.
期刊介绍:
International Journal of Human Resource Management is the forum for HRM scholars and professionals worldwide. Concerned with the expanding role of strategic human resource management in a fast-changing global environment, the journal focuses on future trends in human resource management, drawing on empirical research in the areas of strategic management, international business, organizational behaviour, personnel management and industrial relations that arise from: -internationalization- technological change- market integration- new concepts of line management- increased competition- changing corporate climates Now publishing twenty-two issues per year, The International Journal of Human Resource Management encourages strategically focused articles on a wide range of issues including employee participation, human resource flow, reward systems and high commitment work systems. It is an essential publication in an exciting field, examining all management decisions that affect the relationship between an organization and its employees. Features include; -comparative contributions from both developed and developing countries- special issues based on conferences and current issues- international bibliographies- international data sets- reviews