Authors
Heather N Odle-Dusseau, Leslie B Hammer, Tori L Crain, Todd E Bodner
Publication date
2016/7
Journal
Journal of occupational health psychology
Volume
21
Issue
3
Pages
296
Publisher
Educational Publishing Foundation
Description
Training supervisors to increase their family-supportive supervisor behaviors (FSSB) has demonstrated significant benefits for employee physical health, job satisfaction, and turnover intentions among employees with high levels of family-to-work conflict in prior research in a grocery store context. We replicate and extend these results in a health care setting with additional important employee outcomes (ie, employee engagement, organizational commitment, and supervisor ratings of job performance), and consider the role of the 4 dimensions underlying the FSSB. Using a quasi-experimental, pretest–posttest design, 143 health care employees completed surveys at 2 time periods approximately 10 months apart, along with their supervisors who provided ratings of employees’ job performance. Between these surveys, we offered their supervisors FSSB training; 86 (71%) of these supervisors participated. Results …
Total citations
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