Literature DB >> 24829378

Does Receiving Unsolicited Support Help or Hurt? Receipt of Unsolicited Job Leads and Depression.

Lijun Song1, Wenhong Chen2.   

Abstract

Does receiving unsolicited support protect or hurt health? This study focuses on the receipt of unsolicited job leads and examines opposite hypotheses on its main and interaction effects with economic strain (lack of full-time employment and the duration of lack of full-time employment) and financial dissatisfaction on depression using nationally representative data of working-age adults in the United States. The distress-reducing perspective expects its main effect to be negative, but the distress-inducing perspective predicts the opposite. Furthermore, the need contingency argument anticipates the two competing perspectives-distress reducing and distress inducing-to have stronger explanatory power for adults with more economic strain and financial dissatisfaction and those with less economic strain and financial dissatisfaction, respectively. Results are consistent with the distress-inducing perspective and the need contingency argument. The findings indicate that the receipt of unsolicited job leads often plays a deleterious role for mental health but that the role varies according to the need for job leads. © American Sociological Association 2014.

Entities:  

Keywords:  depression; social support; unsolicited job leads; unsolicited support

Year:  2014        PMID: 24829378     DOI: 10.1177/0022146514532816

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Soc Behav        ISSN: 0022-1465


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