| Literature DB >> 35115957 |
Chienchung Huang1, Xiaoxia Xie2, Shannon P Cheung1, Yuqing Zhou2.
Abstract
Globally, human service professionals, like social workers, experience significant job demands (JD) which can lead to outcomes like psychological distress, burnout, and high turnover rates. This is especially true in China, where the social work profession has grown substantially in recent decades. Because social workers play a crucial role in supporting vulnerable communities, there is a need to understand how their work conditions affect outcomes like psychological distress. This study applies the job demands and resources (JD-R) model to study this relation, along with the mediational effects of positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA), in social workers from Chengdu, China (n = 897). The results of structural equation modeling indicate that JD-R differentially affect psychological distress. PA and NA partially mediate these relations. Job resources (JR) reduced psychological distress by reducing NA and increasing PA. JD did not have any effect on PA but significantly increased NA, which was associated with higher psychological distress. The magnitudes of each estimate suggest that JR has a greater effect on PA and NA, relative to the effects of JD on PA and NA. Interventions that seek to promote PA and reduce NA may be able to work with existing JR to buffer against the effects of JD in social workers.Entities:
Keywords: China; job demands; negative affect; positive affect; psychological distress; resources; social workers
Year: 2022 PMID: 35115957 PMCID: PMC8803745 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.752382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Conceptual model of JD-R, positive affect and negative affect, and psychological distress.
Profile of the sample.
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| |
|---|---|
| Gender [%] | |
| Female | 78.3 |
| Male | 21.7 |
| Age | 31.8 (7.3) |
| Education achievement [%] | |
| Below college | 45.4 |
| College and above | 54.6 |
N = 897.
Descriptive statistics and correlations of key variables.
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Psychological distress [0–24] | 0.94 | 7.2 (5.2) | – | ||||
| 2. Positive affect [5–25] | 0.76 | 15.7 (3.2) | −0.19 | – | |||
| 3. Negative affect [5–25] | 0.87 | 12.1 (4.2) | 0.44 | 0.15 | – | ||
| 4. Job demands [8–56] | 0.82 | 38.5 (6.6) | 0.15 | 0.08 | 0.23 | – | |
| 5. Job resources [18–56] | 0.91 | 40.8 (6.9) | −0.24 | 0.31 | −0.21 | 0.30 | – |
N = 897. Numbers in parentheses show ranges of the variables.
p < 0.05,
p < 0.001.
Results of hypothesis testing.
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|---|---|---|
| H1: JD -> PA | −0.02 | |
| H2: JD -> NA | 0.32 |
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| H3: JR -> PA | 0.31 |
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| H4: JR -> NA | −0.31 |
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| H5: PA -> PD | −0.23 |
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| H6: NA -> PD | 0.43 |
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| H7: Indirect effect of JD on PD | 0.14 |
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| H8: Indirect effect of JR on PD | −0.20 |
|
N = 897.
p < 0.001.
Figure 2Standardized estimates of JD-R, positive affect and negative affect, and psychological distress. **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001.