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Perceived Support Profiles in the Workplace: A Longitudinal Perspective

Gaëtane Caesens, Alexandre J. S. Morin, Nicolas Gillet, Florence Stinglhamber

2021Group & Organization Management18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This research examines how employee’s perceptions of three sources of support in the workplace (i.e., organization, supervisor, and colleagues) combine within specific profiles and the nature of the relations between these profiles and indicators of employees’ psychological health (i.e., stress, sleep problems, psychosomatic strains, and depression). Furthermore, this research examines the within-sample and within-person stability of the identified support profiles over the course of an 8-month time interval. Latent profile and latent transition analyses conducted on a sample of 729 workers indicated six identical profiles across the two measurement occasions: 1, moderately supported; 2, weakly supported; 3, isolated; 4, well-supported; 5, supervisor supported; and 6, highly supported. Profile membership was very stable over time for most profiles, with the exception of the isolated profile which was only moderately stable. Furthermore, the isolated and supervisor-supported profiles presented the lowest levels of psychological health, while the well-supported and moderately supported profiles presented the highest levels of psychological health. Of particular interest, results suggested that some risks might be associated with the highly supported profile, although this result could be a simple reflection of the women-dominant composition of this profile. This research has implications for theory and practice, which will be discussed in the article.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologySupervisorSample (material)Social psychologyPerceptionPerspective (graphical)Occupational stressClinical psychologyApplied psychologyManagementComputer scienceChromatographyArtificial intelligenceNeuroscienceChemistryEconomicsWorkplace Health and Well-beingJob Satisfaction and Organizational BehaviorWorkaholism, burnout, and well-being