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How Can Organizational Leaders Help? Examining the Effectiveness of Leaders’ Support During a Crisis

Authors :
Cheryl E. Gray
Paul E. Spector
Janelle E. Wells
Shayla R. Bianchi
Claudia Ocana-Dominguez
Casey Stringer
Javier Sarmiento
Tiffany Butler
Source :
Journal of Business and Psychology. 38:215-237
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Organizational leaders can make a large, positive impact on their employees during crises. However, existing research demonstrates that social support is not always effective in helping employees cope with stress, and existing research has not fully identified features of support attempts that determine their effectiveness. Using mixed methods, the authors investigate the efficacy of organizational leaders' support efforts during a crisis. In the first study, 571 employees (196 university administrative staff, 192 licensed nurses, and 183 licensed engineers) described actions their leaders engaged in to support them during a global pandemic. Nine themes differentiated helpful from unhelpful leadership support: autonomy, changes, communication, personal resources, safety, timing, tone, work equipment, and workload. Study 2 used a quantitative methodology (162 licensed nurses and 239 licensed engineers) to demonstrate that leadership actions employees deemed as helpful in Study 1 were associated with less employee burnout and fewer physical symptoms. Drawing from emerging social support literature and the stressor-strain model, the findings inform optimal leadership support practices during crises.

Details

ISSN :
1573353X and 08893268
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Business and Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c92ce29920abc37715517b8e66834a1d