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Change in job conditions, change in psychological distress, and gender: a longitudinal study of dual-earner couples

✍ Scribed by ROSALIND C. BARNETT; ROBERT T. BRENNAN


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
232 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0894-3796

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✦ Synopsis


Building on the Job-Strain Theory, we estimated three relationships in a random sample of 201 full-time employed men and women in dual-earner couples interviewed three times over a 2-year period. We ®rst estimated the main eects relationships between change over time in employees' experiences of job demands and job control and change over time in psychological distress. Then we estimated the interaction eects relationship of change in job demands on the relationship between change in job control and change in distress. Finally, we estimated the interaction eects of gender on these relationships. Job control was disaggregated into two conceptually distinct job conditions: skill discretion and decision authority. Controlling for other potentially stressful job conditions such as pay adequacy, job security, and relations with supervisor, as well as trait anxiety (an indicator of negative aectivity), change over time in job demands and skill discretion, but not decision authority, was related to change over time in psychological distress. Equally, for full-time employed women and men in dual-earner couples, if concerns about having to do dull, monotonous work increase over time, distress increases; if concerns about having to work under pressure of time and con¯icting demands increase over time, distress increases. Finally, neither average skill discretion nor change over time in skill discretion moderated the relationship between job demands and psychological distress. Thus, at every level of skill discretion, high job demands were related to high distress.