A multigroup analysis of the job demands-resources model in four home care organizations.
International Journal of Stress Management 10(1): 16-38
Article 2003 English
Authors
AB
Arnold B. Bakker
ED
Evangelia Demerouti
TT
Toon W. Taris
Abstract
1 min read
The job demands-resources (JD-R) model was tested in a study among 3,092 employees working in 1 of 4 different home care organizations. The central assumption in the model is that burnout develops when certain job demands are high and when job resources are limited because such negative working conditions lead to energy depletion and undermine worker motivation and learning opportunities, respectively. A series of multigroup structural equation modeling analyses provide strong evidence for the JD-R model. Specifically, results showed that job demands are primarily and positively related to the exhaustion component of burnout, whereas job resources are primarily related to cynicism (negatively) and professional efficacy (positively). The theoretical and practical implications of the JD-R model are discussed.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.