Work-related dimensions and job stress: The moderating effect of coping strategies

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2010

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SAGE Publications Inc

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The aim of this paper is to examine the moderating effect of coping strategies on the relationship between workrelated dimensions (i.e. work routinization, role clarity, relationships with others and promotional opportunity) and job stress. For the study, a convenience sample of 385 white-collar employees, full-time employed in various types of private sector organizations, belong to different industries and ranked at different levels within the organizations responded. The factor analysis led to identify four broad coping strategies that individuals use, namely, individual positive coping, workplace initiatives, workplace informal support and individual destructive coping. It was found that both individual positive coping and workplace initiatives moderate the relationship between ‘relationships with others’ and job stress. However, none of the coping strategies have moderated the relationship between job stress and the other three work-related dimensions.

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Wickramasinghe, V. (2010). Work-related dimensions and job stress: The moderating effect of coping strategies. Stress and Health: Journal of the International Society for the Investigation of Stress, 26, 417–429. https://doi.org/10.1002/smi.1314

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