The effects of leadership levels and gender on leader well-being.

IF 5.9 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, APPLIED Journal of Occupational Health Psychology Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1037/ocp0000361
Jing Hu, Tony Huiquan Zhang, Chris J Jackson
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Abstract

Previous research examining differences in levels of well-being between leaders and nonleaders has yielded mixed results. To explain the inconsistencies, we compare levels of well-being among nonleaders, mid-level leaders, and high-level leaders. Drawing from the job demands-resources model (Bakker & Demerouti, 2007, 2017) and the expanded version proposed by Crawford et al. (2010), we anticipate mid-level leaders will have lower levels of well-being compared to senior leaders and nonleaders, and females will be more vulnerable than males in mid-level leadership. In Study 1, we use multilevel models and propensity score matching (N = 24,067) and find mid-level leaders have worse general health conditions compared to nonleaders and high-level leaders, and that this effect is more pronounced among females. In Study 2, we collect experience sampling data from workers (N = 86; 1,634 observations) who completed a short survey four times daily for five consecutive working days. Mid-level leaders report more end-of-day negative emotions than high-level leaders and nonleaders, mediated by higher job demands and lower levels of job control to combat the negative effects of job demands; an effect that is particularly pronounced among female respondents. In Study 3, we use a two-wave time-lagged survey study (N = 330) and find middle managers have more challenge and hindrance job demands than nonleaders, and insufficient job control to offset the negative effects of job demands. Female middle managers report the most physical health symptoms and enjoy less eudaemonic well-being than their male counterparts. We conclude that leadership levels and gender have important and overlooked impacts on well-being. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

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领导水平和性别对领导者幸福感的影响。
先前的研究考察了领导者和非领导者之间幸福感水平的差异,结果喜忧参半。为了解释这种不一致性,我们比较了非领导人、中层领导人和高层领导人的幸福感水平。根据工作需求-资源模型(Bakker&Demerouti,20072017)和Crawford等人提出的扩展版本。(2010),我们预计,与高级领导和非领导相比,中层领导的幸福感水平将较低,在中层领导中,女性将比男性更脆弱。在研究1中,我们使用了多层次模型和倾向得分匹配(N=24067),发现与非领导者和高层领导者相比,中层领导者的总体健康状况更差,而且这种影响在女性中更为明显。在研究2中,我们收集了工人的经验抽样数据(N=86;1634次观察),他们连续五个工作日每天完成四次简短调查。中层领导比高层领导和非领导报告更多的负面情绪,这是由更高的工作需求和更低的工作控制水平来调节的,以对抗工作需求的负面影响;这种影响在女性受访者中尤为明显。在研究3中,我们使用了两波时间滞后的调查研究(N=330),发现中层管理者比非领导者有更多的挑战和阻碍工作需求,并且没有足够的工作控制来抵消工作需求的负面影响。女性中层管理者报告的身体健康症状最多,享受的幸福感不如男性。我们得出的结论是,领导水平和性别对幸福感有着重要而被忽视的影响。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
5.90%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: Journal of Occupational Health Psychology offers research, theory, and public policy articles in occupational health psychology, an interdisciplinary field representing a broad range of backgrounds, interests, and specializations. Occupational health psychology concerns the application of psychology to improving the quality of work life and to protecting and promoting the safety, health, and well-being of workers. This journal focuses on the work environment, the individual, and the work-family interface.
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