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Job insecurity and employee health: the buffering potential of job control and job self-efficacy

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

This study examines the direct and moderating effects of two types of control that employees have over the work situation - job control and job self-efficacy- on the relationship between job insecurity and employee health. The authors hypothesize that job control and job self-efficacy attenuate the negative effects of job insecurity on both a short-term (i.e. need for recovery) and a long-term health outcome (i.e. impaired general health). These hypotheses were examined using survey data collected from a heterogeneous sample of 1368 Belgian workers. Results of moderated regression analysis showed that job control, but not job self-efficacy, buffered the negative effects of job insecurity on employee health. We conclude that organizations can temper the negative health effects of job insecurity by giving their employees more control over their work. © 2010 Taylor & Francis.
Journal: Work and Stress
ISSN: 0267-8373
Issue: 1
Volume: 24
Pages: 56 - 72
Publication year:2010
BOF-keylabel:yes
IOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:2
CSS-citation score:2
Authors:International
Authors from:Higher Education