Abstract

Much has been written about veterans and their reintegration into civilian society, but little or no information is available about veteransā€™ workplace perceptions and how these might differ from those of nonveterans. The authors compared veteransā€™ and nonveteransā€™ attitudes about work (including job satisfaction aspects, perceptions of coworker interactions, supervisory support, and others) in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) based on responses to the organizational census, VA All Employee Survey (AES; N = 179,271). Based on differences in crude (unadjusted, but controlling for location) item odds ratios (range 0.65ā€“1.08), compared to nonveterans, veterans scored modestly lower on most AES items. The authors show how controlling for demographics changes the relative size and, in some cases, the direction of the differences. This current study is 1 of only 2, to our knowledge, large-scale assessments of veteransā€™ workplace perceptions and the only 1 which controlled the results for demographic characteristics.

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