The moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: A study among health professionals

Abstract Aim The present study was set out to establish the link between emotional labour (surface and deep acting) and job attitudes (job satisfaction organizational commitment) by introducing perceived organizational support as a moderating variable. Design The study made use of a cross‐sectional...

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Main Authors: Joshua King Safo Lartey, Kwesi Amponsah‐Tawiah, Joseph Osafo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-07-01
Series:Nursing Open
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.295
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spelling doaj-79c3c4eaba8b457998e74c0f4ca304352020-11-25T02:34:41ZengWileyNursing Open2054-10582019-07-016399099710.1002/nop2.295The moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: A study among health professionalsJoshua King Safo Lartey0Kwesi Amponsah‐Tawiah1Joseph Osafo2Department of Organisation and Human Resource Management University of Ghana Business School Accra GhanaDepartment of Organisation and Human Resource Management University of Ghana Business School Accra GhanaDepartment of Psychology, School of Social Science University of Ghana Accra GhanaAbstract Aim The present study was set out to establish the link between emotional labour (surface and deep acting) and job attitudes (job satisfaction organizational commitment) by introducing perceived organizational support as a moderating variable. Design The study made use of a cross‐sectional design by sampling three hundred and forty‐two (342) nurses and midwives from six health facilities in Ghana. Methods The study employed a quantitative approach to examine the relationships between the study variables. Results The study disclosed that whereas surface acting related negatively with job satisfaction but not with organizational commitment, deep acting did not relate significantly with both job satisfaction and organizational commitment. Perceived organizational support as a moderating variable showed a significant moderating effect between surface acting and job attitudes. However, Perceived organizational support moderated the relationship between deep acting and organizational commitment but not job satisfaction. The findings pose much contextual relevance to health professionals where emotional regulations are core responsibilities of health care.https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.295emotional labourjob attitudesperceived organizational support
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joshua King Safo Lartey
Kwesi Amponsah‐Tawiah
Joseph Osafo
spellingShingle Joshua King Safo Lartey
Kwesi Amponsah‐Tawiah
Joseph Osafo
The moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: A study among health professionals
Nursing Open
emotional labour
job attitudes
perceived organizational support
author_facet Joshua King Safo Lartey
Kwesi Amponsah‐Tawiah
Joseph Osafo
author_sort Joshua King Safo Lartey
title The moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: A study among health professionals
title_short The moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: A study among health professionals
title_full The moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: A study among health professionals
title_fullStr The moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: A study among health professionals
title_full_unstemmed The moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: A study among health professionals
title_sort moderating effect of perceived organizational support in the relationship between emotional labour and job attitudes: a study among health professionals
publisher Wiley
series Nursing Open
issn 2054-1058
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Aim The present study was set out to establish the link between emotional labour (surface and deep acting) and job attitudes (job satisfaction organizational commitment) by introducing perceived organizational support as a moderating variable. Design The study made use of a cross‐sectional design by sampling three hundred and forty‐two (342) nurses and midwives from six health facilities in Ghana. Methods The study employed a quantitative approach to examine the relationships between the study variables. Results The study disclosed that whereas surface acting related negatively with job satisfaction but not with organizational commitment, deep acting did not relate significantly with both job satisfaction and organizational commitment. Perceived organizational support as a moderating variable showed a significant moderating effect between surface acting and job attitudes. However, Perceived organizational support moderated the relationship between deep acting and organizational commitment but not job satisfaction. The findings pose much contextual relevance to health professionals where emotional regulations are core responsibilities of health care.
topic emotional labour
job attitudes
perceived organizational support
url https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.295
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