Area of Organization Studies, Schulich School of Business, York University.
Department of Psychology, Michigan State University.
J Appl Psychol. 2021 Nov;106(11):1601-1614. doi: 10.1037/apl0000983.
As the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has imposed significant risks to our health and affected our social and economic order, information on COVID-19 becomes readily accessible via various mass media and social media. In the current research, we aim to understand the impacts of employees' exposure to COVID-19 information on their workplace behaviors. Integrating Terror Management Theory (TMT; Becker, 1973; Greenberg et al., 1986) with Generativity Theory (Erikson, 1963, 1982), we proposed and investigated two psychological mechanisms (i.e., death anxiety and generativity-based death reflection) that account for the effects of employees' COVID-19 information exposure on their work withdrawal and helping behaviors toward coworkers. We also examined organizational actions [internal and external corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities] that served as a context for employees to make sense of their COVID-19 information exposure. We conducted two studies with samples of full-time employees (N1 = 278; N2 = 382) to test our predictions. Results in both studies showed that employees' exposure to COVID-19 information was positively related to their death anxiety and generativity-based death reflection, which in turn predicted their work withdrawal and helping behaviors, respectively. Further, employees' perceived internal CSR of their organization mitigated the positive association between COVID-19 information exposure and their death anxiety, weakening the positive indirect effect of COVID-19 information exposure on their work withdrawal. Our study offers new insights to the understanding of work and employment in the COVID-19 pandemic and sheds light on how individuals' death-related experiences shape work-related behaviors. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
由于冠状病毒病(COVID-19)对我们的健康造成了重大威胁,并影响了我们的社会和经济秩序,各种大众媒体和社交媒体上都可以轻松获取有关 COVID-19 的信息。在当前的研究中,我们旨在了解员工接触 COVID-19 信息对其工作场所行为的影响。我们将恐怖管理理论(TMT;Becker,1973;Greenberg 等人,1986)与生殖理论(Erikson,1963,1982)相结合,提出并研究了两个心理机制(即死亡焦虑和基于生殖的死亡反思),以解释员工接触 COVID-19 信息对其工作退出和对同事的帮助行为的影响。我们还研究了组织行为(内部和外部企业社会责任(CSR)活动),这些行为为员工理解其 COVID-19 信息暴露提供了背景。我们进行了两项包含全职员工样本的研究(N1 = 278;N2 = 382)来检验我们的预测。两项研究的结果均表明,员工接触 COVID-19 信息与他们的死亡焦虑和基于生殖的死亡反思呈正相关,而死亡焦虑和基于生殖的死亡反思又分别预测了他们的工作退出和帮助行为。此外,员工对组织内部 CSR 的感知减轻了 COVID-19 信息暴露与死亡焦虑之间的正相关关系,从而削弱了 COVID-19 信息暴露对其工作退出的正向间接影响。我们的研究为理解 COVID-19 大流行期间的工作和就业提供了新的见解,并阐明了个体与死亡相关的经历如何塑造与工作相关的行为。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2021 APA,保留所有权利)。