解构工作不安全感:定性和定量维度是否一致?

IF 1.6 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, APPLIED
Occupational Health Science Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-08-12 DOI:10.1007/s41542-021-00096-3
Ieva Urbanaviciute, Jurgita Lazauskaite-Zabielske, Hans De Witte
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引用次数: 9

摘要

尽管人们对工作不安全感作为一种严重的工作压力源非常感兴趣,但其定性和定量维度共同发生的方式尚未完全了解。因此,它们组合的多样性和它们产生的潜在差异效应仍未得到充分探索。目前的研究旨在通过两种方式解决这一差距。首先,我们假设定量工作不安全感会与定性工作不安全感一起以累积的形式表现出来,而不是相反。其次,我们旨在检验定量和定性工作不安全感的不同组合是否在员工的职业特征和健康福祉结果中有所差异。对两个不同的员工样本(N = 1077和N = 608)进行了潜在剖面分析。这两个样本的研究结果都支持定性和定量工作不安全感的三种解决方案,导致平衡的低、平衡的高和定性工作不安全感占主导地位。正如预期的那样,在平衡的高(即累积的)工作不安全状况中,临时和非全日制就业的可能性最高。此外,与低工作不安全感相比,平衡的高工作不安全感和定性工作不安全感的主导形象与心理健康和幸福感的关系都要低得多,这表明即使只经历定性工作不安全感,也可能产生实质性的有害影响。补充资料:在线版本包含补充资料,下载地址:10.1007/s41542-021-00096-3。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Deconstructing Job Insecurity: Do its Qualitative and Quantitative Dimensions Add Up?

Deconstructing Job Insecurity: Do its Qualitative and Quantitative Dimensions Add Up?

Despite substantial interest in job insecurity as a severe workplace stressor, the way in which its qualitative and quantitative dimensions co-occur is not fully understood. As a result, the variety of their combinations and potentially differential effects that they produce remain underexplored. The current study aimed to address this gap in two ways. First, we hypothesized that quantitative job insecurity would manifest in a cumulated form along with qualitative job insecurity but not vice versa. Second, we aimed to test whether different combinations of quantitative and qualitative job insecurity differentially reflect in employees' occupational characteristics and health and well-being outcomes. Latent profile analyses were conducted on two different samples of employees (N = 1077 and N = 608). The findings from both samples supported a three-profile solution of qualitative and quantitative job insecurity resulting in the balanced low, balanced high, and qualitative job insecurity dominant profiles. As expected, the probability of temporary and part-time employment was the highest in the balanced high (i.e., cumulated) job insecurity profile. Moreover, both the balanced high and the qualitative job insecurity dominant profiles were linked to significantly lower mental health and well-being than the low job insecurity profile, suggesting that substantially detrimental effects may occur even if experiencing qualitative job insecurity only.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s41542-021-00096-3.

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