| Literature DB >> 33138254 |
GholamReza Zandi1, Imran Shahzad2, Muhammad Farrukh3,4, Sebastian Kot5,6.
Abstract
Measurement of job stress and employees' commitment are few of the admired topics in the corporate world amongst business writers. With a principal aim to trial the blow of exposure to COVID-19 patients on doctors' job stress and commitment, in Pakistan; data have been collected through 7-10 min telephonic interview from voluntary participants and a sample of 129 responses were analyzed by Structure Equation Modeling-Partial Least Square (SEM-PLS) path modeling through Smart PLS 3.2. The results of the study indicated; direct positive & significant impact of Extent of Exposure on Job Stress while direct negative, significant association with Commitment. Job Stress also observed having direct negative impact on commitment. The Extent of Exposure-Job Stress relationship was also found stronger among group of doctors having Low level of Perceived Organizational Support and weaker among group of doctors having High level of Perceive Organizational support. Perceived Organizational Support showed a moderating effect on the Extent of Exposure-Job Stress relationship; while, Social Support showed no moderation. Researchers are required to investigate more and management of the medical services providers (both hospitals and government) needs to focus on doctors' perception about Organizational Support, as doctors show no concern about the support from society as long as their well-being is cared for by respective hospitals. This study is an effort to stimulate more empirical evidence towards the treating and handling of COVID-19 patients and the psychological well-being of doctors.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; exposure; job stress; organizational commitment; perceived organizational support; quarantine; social support
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33138254 PMCID: PMC7662317 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17217961
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Conceptual framework.
Assessment results (Factor Loading, Composite Reliability (CR) and Average Variance Extracted (AVE)).
| Construct | Items | Loadings | CR | AVE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.839 | 0.636 | ||
| EE1 | 0.723 | |||
| EE2 | 0.781 | |||
| EE3 | 0.881 | |||
|
| 0.905 | 0.706 | ||
| JS1 | 0.779 | |||
| JS2 | 0.891 | |||
| JS3 | 0.897 | |||
| JS4 | 0.786 | |||
|
| 0.911 | 0.633 | ||
| POS1 | 0.891 | |||
| POS2 | 0.814 | |||
| POS3 | 0.700 | |||
| POS4 | 0.813 | |||
| POS5 | 0.784 | |||
| POS6 | 0.758 | |||
|
| 0.890 | 0.574 | ||
| SS1 | 0.742 | |||
| SS2 | 0.719 | |||
| SS3 | 0.773 | |||
| SS4 | 0.701 | |||
| SS5 | 0.819 | |||
| SS6 | 0.785 | |||
|
| 0.885 | 0.563 | ||
| OC1 | 0.722 | |||
| OC2 | 0.739 | |||
| OC3 | 0.739 | |||
| OC4 | 0.789 | |||
| OC5 | 0.767 | |||
| OC6 | 0.744 |
Discriminant validity (by Heterotrait Monotrait—HTMT ratio).
| Factors | HTMT Ratio |
|---|---|
|
| 0.511 |
|
| 0.325 |
|
| 0.441 |
|
| 0.431 |
|
| 0.321 |
Hypothesis results by bootstrapping (direct relationships).
| Hypothesis | Path | Path Coefficient | t Statistics (|O/STDEV|) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| EE->JS | 0.302 | 3.631 | 0.000 |
|
| EE->OC | −0.208 | 2.127 | 0.000 |
|
| JS-OC | −0.211 | 2.961 | 0.000 |
Mediation analysis (indirect relationship).
| Hypothesis | Indirect Path | Path Coefficient | T Statistics (|O/STDEV|) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| EE ->JS -> OC | 0.159 | 3.63 | 0 |
Results of moderation Analysis of Perceived Organizational Support on Extent of Exposure (EE)–Job Stress (JS).
| Relationship | β Values | t-Value | Result | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.135 | 2.02 | 0.00 | Supported |
Results of moderation analysis of SS on the relationships between EE–JS.
| Relationship | β Values | T-Value | Result | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.060 | 0.201 | 0.218 | No moderation |