Abstract

AbstractAlthough researchers and practitioners increasingly focus on health promotion in organizations, research has been mainly fragmented and fails to integrate different organizational levels in terms of their effects on employee health. Drawing on organizational climate and social identity research, we present a cascading model of organizational health climate and demonstrate how and when leaders' perceptions of organizational health climate are linked to employee well‐being. We tested our model in two multisource studies (NStudy 1 = 65 leaders and 291 employees; NStudy 2 = 401 leader–employee dyads). Results showed that leaders' perceptions of organizational health climate were positively related to their health mindsets (i.e., their health awareness). These in turn were positively associated with their health‐promoting leadership behavior, which ultimately went along with better employee well‐being. Additionally, in Study 1, the relationship between perceived organizational health climate and leaders' health mindsets was moderated by their organizational identification. High leader identification strengthened the relationship between perceived organizational health climate and leaders' health mindsets. These findings have important implications for theory and practice as they show how the dynamics of an organizational health climate can unfold in organizations and how it is related to employee well‐being via the novel concept of health‐promoting leadership.

Highlights

  • Research has identified several key factors that affect employee wellbeing at work

  • We propose a multilevel cascading model in which leaders' perceptions of organizational health climate are related to their health-promoting leadership behavior via leaders' health mindsets, and health-promoting leadership behavior in turn relates to employee well-being

  • As testing individual paths in this model does not sufficiently test such multilevel relationships (Edwards & Lambert, 2007), we provide a final overall hypothesis that integrates all hypotheses and specifies the cross-level mediation predicted by our model: Hypothesis 6 Perceived organizational health climate is related to employee emotional exhaustion and work engagement via serial indirect relations

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Summary

Introduction

Research has identified several key factors that affect employee wellbeing at work These include variables at the individual level, such as personality traits (e.g., Soto, 2015; Strickhouser, Zell, & Krizan, 2017); taskrelated variables, such as time pressure and job control (e.g., Demerouti, Bakker, Nachreiner, & Schaufeli, 2001; Elovainio, Kivimäki, Steen, & Kalliomäki-Levanto, 2000); and aspects of the immediate work context, such as leader behavior (e.g., Montano, Reeske, Franke, & Hüffmeier, 2017; Skakon, Nielsen, Borg, & Guzman, 2010). The topic of well-being in the workplace has received significant attention in research and human resource management (e.g., Conway, Fu, Monks, Alfes, & Bailey, 2016)

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