Abstract

Health- and social workers are frequently exposed to emotionally demanding work situations that require emotion regulation. Studies have demonstrated a direct relationship between emotion regulation and health complaints and sickness absence. In order to prevent health complaints and to reduce sickness absence among health- and social workers, there is need for greater attention to mechanisms explaining when and how emotionally demanding work situations are related to employee health and sickness absence. The overarching aim of this study was therefore to examine the moderating role of generalized self-efficacy on the association between emotional dissonance, employee health (mental distress and exhaustion), and registry based sickness absence. The sample consisted of 937 health- and social workers. Data on emotional dissonance, generalized self-efficacy, exhaustion, and mental distress was collected through questionnaires, whereas official registry data were used to assess sickness absence. A two-step hierarchical regression analysis showed that emotional dissonance was significantly associated with exhaustion, mental distress, and sickness absence, after adjusting for sex, age, and occupation. Interaction analyses with simple slope tests found that self-efficacy moderated the association between emotional dissonance and both exhaustion and mental distress, but not the association with sickness absence. This study shows that health- and social workers who frequently experience emotional dissonance report higher levels of exhaustion and mental distress, and have a higher risk of medically certified sickness absence. Further, health- and social workers with lower self-efficacy beliefs are apparently more sensitive to the degree of emotional dissonance and experienced higher levels of exhaustion and mental distress.

Highlights

  • Health- and social workers are frequently exposed to emotionally demanding work situations when they provide support and assistance to patients and clients

  • Emotional dissonance was significantly positive correlated with exhaustion (r = 0.23, p < 0.01), mental distress (r = 0.19, p < 0.01), sickness absence (r = 0.08, p < 0.05), and significantly negative correlated with self-efficacy (r = −0.11, p < 0.01)

  • Exhaustion was significantly positive correlated with mental distress (r = 0.73, p < 0.01) and sickness absence (r = 0.12, p < 0.01), and significantly negative correlated with self-efficacy (r = −0.13, p < 0.01)

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Summary

Introduction

Health- and social workers are frequently exposed to emotionally demanding work situations when they provide support and assistance to patients and clients. The emotional aspects of working directly with patients and clients, emotion work ( known as “emotional labor”), refer to psychological processes necessary to express emotions that are desired by the organization during. Emotional Dissonance, Self-Efficacy, and Health interactions (Zapf, 2002). In her seminal book, The Managed Heart, Hochschild (1983) proposed emotional labor as a work stressor that is potentially detrimental to the psychological and physical well-being of employees. The term labor is often used when sociological and social concepts are involved and not when individual behaviors, such as having to regulate emotions at work, are the concept of interest. In line with Zapf (2002) and the field of work psychology, the term emotion work is preferred in the current study

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