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Job control mediates change in a work reorganization intervention for stress reduction.
323
Citations
52
References
2001
Year
Job PerformanceHealthy Work EnvironmentEducationHealth PsychologyMental HealthHuman Resource ManagementWorker HealthSocial WorkOrganizational BehaviorPsychologySocial SciencesWork AdjustmentStressManagementOccupational Health PsychologyStress ReductionStress ManagementPar InterventionRehabilitationApplied Social PsychologyWork-related StressJob ControlOccupational TherapyBehavior ChangeWork Reorganization Intervention
This longitudinal, quasi-experiment tested whether a work reorganization intervention can improve stress-related outcomes by increasing people's job control. To this end, the authors used a participative action research (PAR) intervention that had the goal of reorganizing work to increase the extent to which people had discretion and choice in their work. Results indicated that the PAR intervention significantly improved people's mental health, sickness absence rates, and self-rated performance at a 1-year follow-up. Consistent with occupational health psychology theories, increase in job control served as the mechanism, or mediator, by which these improvements occurred. Discussion focuses on the need to understand the mechanisms by which work reorganization interventions affect change.
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