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Emotional Intelligence, Work Satisfaction, and Affective Commitment: An Occupational Health Study of Social Workers

Angus C.H. Kuok

2022Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Social workers’ work engagement and burnout were tested in relation to (a) personal variable, i.e., emotional intelligence; (b) organizational variables, i.e., work satisfaction and affective commitment. Regressions revealed emotional intelligence - controlling self – negatively predicted depersonalization and reduced personal accomplishment and positively predicted three facets of work engagement. Emotional intelligence - understanding others – was a negative predictor of reduced personal accomplishment. In addition, work satisfaction negatively predicted three components of burnout and positively predicted emotional work engagement. Affective commitment was a positive predictor of three facets of work engagement and negatively predicted reduced personal accomplishment. Implications for management are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

DepersonalizationPsychologyWork engagementBurnoutEmotional exhaustionEmotional intelligenceSocial psychologyOccupational burnoutJob satisfactionWork (physics)Clinical psychologyMechanical engineeringEngineeringHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutEmotional Intelligence and PerformanceStress and Burnout Research