Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"psychological empowerment" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 A Multilevel Person-Centered Perspective on the Role of Job Demands and Resources for Employees' Job Engagement and Burnout Profiles Gillet N; Morin AJS; Blais AR; 38698872
CONCORDIA
2 Work Fatigue Profiles: Nature, Implications, and Associations With Psychological Empowerment. Blais AR, Gillet N, Houle SA, Comeau CA, Morin AJS 33329261
CONCORDIA

 

Title:A Multilevel Person-Centered Perspective on the Role of Job Demands and Resources for Employees' Job Engagement and Burnout Profiles
Authors:Gillet NMorin AJSBlais AR
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38698872/
DOI:10.1177/10596011221100893
Publication:Group & organization management
Keywords:burnoutjob demands and resourcesjob engagementlatent profilesmultilevelpsychological empowerment
PMID:38698872 Category: Date Added:2024-05-03
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA
1 QualiPsy EE 1901, Université de Tours, Tours, France and Institut Universitaire de France (IUF), Paris, France.
2 Substantive-Methodological Synergy Research Laboratory, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
3 Statistics Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

Description:

The present study examined the configurations, or profiles, taken by distinct global and specific facets of job engagement and burnout (by relying on a bifactor operationalization of these constructs) among a nationally representative sample of Canadian Defence employees (n = 13,088; nested within 65 work units). The present study also adopted a multilevel perspective to investigate the role of job demands (work overload and role ambiguity), as well as individual (psychological empowerment), workgroup (interpersonal justice), supervisor (transformational leadership), and organizational (organizational support) resources in the prediction of profile membership. Latent profile analyses revealed five profiles of employees: Burned-Out/Disengaged (7.13%), Burned-Out/Involved (12.13%), Engaged (18.14%), Engaged/Exhausted (15.50%), and Normative (47.10%). The highest turnover intentions were observed in the Burned-Out/Disengaged profile, and the lowest in the Engaged profile. Employees' perceptions of job demands and resources were also associated with profile membership across both levels, although the effects of psychological empowerment were more pronounced than the effects of job demands and resources related to the workgroup, supervisor, and organization. Individual-level effects were also more pronounced than effects occurring at the work unit level, where shared perceptions of work overload and organizational support proved to be the key shared drivers of profile membership.





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