McCoy College of Business, Texas State University, San Marcos, TX, USA.
College of Business Administration, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, USA.
Psychol Rep. 2023 Dec;126(6):2621-2647. doi: 10.1177/00332941221109105. Epub 2022 Jun 15.
Drawing on the transactional theory of stress, the current study investigates whether employee job insecurity triggers employee behavioral strain reactions (i.e., alcohol use, marijuana use, and cigarette use) and psychological strain reactions (i.e., emotional exhaustion and depression) through stress during the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, we integrate social support theory and expect the moderating role of pet attachment support in the above relationships. By collecting two-wave data from 187 employees with pets in the United States, we found that during the COVID-19 pandemic, stress mediated the relationships between job insecurity and predicted behavioral and psychological reactions. Moreover, pet attachment support buffered the relationships between stress and these behavioral and psychological strain reactions (all except cigarette use). Pet attachment support also alleviated the conditional indirect effects job insecurity had on the two types of strain reactions via stress. We discuss theoretical and practical implications of this study.
本研究以应激的交互作用理论为基础,探讨了员工工作不安全感是否会通过新冠疫情期间的压力引发员工的行为紧张反应(即饮酒、使用大麻和吸烟)和心理紧张反应(即情绪耗竭和抑郁)。此外,我们整合了社会支持理论,并期望宠物依恋支持在上述关系中起到调节作用。我们通过从美国的 187 名有宠物的员工那里收集了两波数据,发现新冠疫情期间,压力中介了工作不安全感与预测的行为和心理反应之间的关系。此外,宠物依恋支持缓冲了压力与这些行为和心理紧张反应之间的关系(除吸烟外)。宠物依恋支持还通过压力减轻了工作不安全感对两种类型的紧张反应的条件间接影响。我们讨论了这项研究的理论和实践意义。