Authors
Sabine Sonnentag, Iris Kuttler, Charlotte Fritz
Publication date
2010/6/30
Journal
Journal of Vocational Behavior
Volume
76
Issue
3
Pages
355-365
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
This paper examines psychological detachment (i.e., mentally “switching off”) from work during non-work time as a partial mediator between job stressors and low work-home boundaries on the one hand and strain reactions (emotional exhaustion, need for recovery) on the other hand. Survey data were collected from a sample of protestant pastors (N=136) and their spouses (N=97). Analyses showed that high workload, emotional dissonance, and low spatial work-home boundaries were related to poor psychological detachment from work during non-work time. Poor psychological detachment in turn predicted high levels of emotional exhaustion and need for recovery. Psychological detachment was a partial mediator between job stressors and strain reactions. This study avoids same-source bias and demonstrates the importance of psychological detachment in the stressor–strain relationship.
Total citations
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