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Well-Being and Affective Commitment among Ambulance Volunteers: A Mediational Model of Job Burnout
Authors:Ilaria Setti  Lara Colombo  Claudio Giovanni Cortese  Chiara Ghislieri  Piergiorgio Argentero
Affiliation:1. Unit of Applied Psychology, Department of Brain and Behavioral Sciences, University of Pavia, Piazza Botta, Pavia, Italy;2. Department of Psychology, University of Turin, via Verdi, Turin, Italy
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Burnout represents a relevant risk for ambulance volunteers. According to the Job Demands-Resources model, role conflict and social support can be considered as antecedents of burnout which, in turn, may lower affective commitment. This study aims to investigate the relationship between social support, role conflict, and affective commitment, as mediated by job burnout. Survey data were collected from 352 Italian volunteers and analyzed using structural equation modeling methods. Social support was confirmed as a protective factor, and role conflict as an antecedent of burnout which, in turn, decreases affective commitment. The relationship between role conflict and affective commitment is mediated by burnout which, on the contrary, does not mediate the effect of social support on affective commitment. Social support may protect against burnout. Because of its positive effects on a personal and an organizational level, affective commitment may be increased raising levels of supervisor support and reshaping role expectations. It could be useful to carry out future longitudinal studies, in order to confirm the antecedents and effects of job burnout; furthermore, this research should be extended to other ambulance organizations, in order to generalize the results; finally, multi-group analyses would allow to bring out possible differences between paid-staff and volunteers.
Keywords:Volunteerism  burnout  affective commitment  social support  role conflict
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