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The importance of self-efficacy in the moderating effects of social support on stressor-strain relationships
Authors:Thomas A Stetz  Melba C Stetz  Paul D Bliese
Institution:  a National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, Bethesda, USA, MD b Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Springs, USA, MD c US Army Medical Research Unit-Europe,
Abstract:Occupational stress research offers inconsistent findings on the moderating effects of social support on the stressor-strain relationship. This study contributes to the research literature by examining how social support's moderating effect is dependent on one's self-efficacy. Ninety-six US military police soldiers completed two surveys 3 months apart. The results showed that three out of four regression equations had significant three-way interactions. Organizational constraints×supervisor support×self-efficacy had statistically significant interactions in the prediction of job satisfaction and psychological well-being. Organizational constraints×co-worker support×self-efficacy had a significant interaction in the predicted of psychological well-being. These interactions explained between 5% and 10% of the variance in the dependent variables. Social support buffered the stressor-strain relationship when self-efficacy was high and reverse buffered the relationship when self-efficacy was low. These results indicate that interventions aimed at reducing strains by increasing social support should consider an individual's self-efficacy. Future research should consider incorporating content of communication to determine if high and low self-efficacy individuals receive or react differently to different types of communication content.
Keywords:Social support  self-efficacy  organizational constraints  work-related stress  stressor-strain relationships
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