Authors
Caren Baruch-Feldman, Elizabeth Brondolo, Dena Ben-Dayan, Joseph Schwartz
Publication date
2002/1
Journal
Journal of occupational health psychology
Volume
7
Issue
1
Pages
84
Publisher
Educational Publishing Foundation
Description
Social support has been identified as an important correlate of a variety of work outcomes. Support from different sources, including family, coworkers, and supervisors, was examined in 211 traffic enforcement agents (92 men, 119 women). Outcomes included subjective variables (burnout and job satisfaction) and an objective measure of productivity (number of summonses). Support was negatively associated with burnout and positively associated with satisfaction and productivity. A cluster of support variables accounted for 7% of the variance in burnout and productivity and 12% of the variance in job satisfaction. Family support was more closely associated with burnout than with satisfaction or productivity, whereas immediate supervisor support was related to satisfaction and productivity but not burnout. Results suggest that support may be associated with work-related outcomes through multiple pathways.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Baruch-Feldman, E Brondolo, D Ben-Dayan… - Journal of occupational health psychology, 2002