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Economic stress, emotional contagion and safety outcomes: A cross-country study.
Work. 2020; 66(2):421-435.WORK

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Economic instability produced by financial crises can increase employment-related (i.e., job insecurity) and income-related (i.e., financial stress) economic stress. While the detrimental impact of job insecurity on safety outcomes has been extensively investigated, no study has examined the concurrent role of financial stress let alone their emotion-related predictors.

OBJECTIVE

The present cross-country research sought to identify the simultaneous effects of affective job insecurity and financial stress in predicting employee safety injuries and accidents under-reporting, and to examine the extent to which emotional contagion of positive/negative emotions at work contribute to the level of experienced economic stress.

METHODS

We performed multi-group measurement and structural invariance analyses.

RESULTS

Data from employees in the US (N = 498) and Italy (N = 366) suggest that financial stress is the primary mediator between emotional contagion and poor safety outcomes. Moreover, greater anger-contagion predicted higher levels of financial strain and job insecurity whereas greater joy-contagion predicted reduced economic stress.

CONCLUSIONS

Our findings support the relevance of considering the concurrent role of income-and employment-related stressors as predictors of safety-related outcomes. Theoretical and practical implications for safety are discussed in light of the globally increasing emotional pressure and concerns of income- and employment-related economic stress in today's workplace, particularly given the recent pandemic spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

Authors+Show Affiliations

Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.Washington State University Vancouver, Vancouver, WA, USA.Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

32568157

Citation

Petitta, Laura, et al. "Economic Stress, Emotional Contagion and Safety Outcomes: a Cross-country Study." Work (Reading, Mass.), vol. 66, no. 2, 2020, pp. 421-435.
Petitta L, Probst TM, Ghezzi V, et al. Economic stress, emotional contagion and safety outcomes: A cross-country study. Work. 2020;66(2):421-435.
Petitta, L., Probst, T. M., Ghezzi, V., & Barbaranelli, C. (2020). Economic stress, emotional contagion and safety outcomes: A cross-country study. Work (Reading, Mass.), 66(2), 421-435. https://doi.org/10.3233/WOR-203182
Petitta L, et al. Economic Stress, Emotional Contagion and Safety Outcomes: a Cross-country Study. Work. 2020;66(2):421-435. PubMed PMID: 32568157.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Economic stress, emotional contagion and safety outcomes: A cross-country study. AU - Petitta,Laura, AU - Probst,Tahira M, AU - Ghezzi,Valerio, AU - Barbaranelli,Claudio, PY - 2020/6/23/pubmed PY - 2020/8/6/medline PY - 2020/6/23/entrez KW - Economic stress KW - accident under-reporting KW - emotional contagion KW - workplace injuries SP - 421 EP - 435 JF - Work (Reading, Mass.) JO - Work VL - 66 IS - 2 N2 - BACKGROUND: Economic instability produced by financial crises can increase employment-related (i.e., job insecurity) and income-related (i.e., financial stress) economic stress. While the detrimental impact of job insecurity on safety outcomes has been extensively investigated, no study has examined the concurrent role of financial stress let alone their emotion-related predictors. OBJECTIVE: The present cross-country research sought to identify the simultaneous effects of affective job insecurity and financial stress in predicting employee safety injuries and accidents under-reporting, and to examine the extent to which emotional contagion of positive/negative emotions at work contribute to the level of experienced economic stress. METHODS: We performed multi-group measurement and structural invariance analyses. RESULTS: Data from employees in the US (N = 498) and Italy (N = 366) suggest that financial stress is the primary mediator between emotional contagion and poor safety outcomes. Moreover, greater anger-contagion predicted higher levels of financial strain and job insecurity whereas greater joy-contagion predicted reduced economic stress. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support the relevance of considering the concurrent role of income-and employment-related stressors as predictors of safety-related outcomes. Theoretical and practical implications for safety are discussed in light of the globally increasing emotional pressure and concerns of income- and employment-related economic stress in today's workplace, particularly given the recent pandemic spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19). SN - 1875-9270 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/32568157/Economic_stress_emotional_contagion_and_safety_outcomes:_A_cross_country_study_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -