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Published in: International Journal of Behavioral Medicine 4/2017

01-08-2017

High Job Demands, Still Engaged and Not Burned Out? The Role of Job Crafting

Authors: Jari J. Hakanen, Piia Seppälä, Maria C. W. Peeters

Published in: International Journal of Behavioral Medicine | Issue 4/2017

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Abstract

Purpose

Traditionally, employee well-being has been considered as resulting from decent working conditions arranged by the organization. Much less is known about whether employees themselves can make self-initiated changes to their work, i.e., craft their jobs, in order to stay well, even in highly demanding work situations. The aim of this study was to use the job demands-resources (JD-R model) to investigate whether job crafting buffers the negative impacts of four types of job demands (workload, emotional dissonance, work contents, and physical demands) on burnout and work engagement.

Method

A questionnaire study was designed to examine the buffering role of job crafting among 470 Finnish dentists.

Results

All in all, 11 out of 16 possible interaction effects of job demands and job crafting on employee well-being were significant. Job crafting particularly buffered the negative effects of job demands on burnout (7/8 significant interactions) and to a somewhat lesser extent also on work engagement (4/8 significant interactions). Applying job crafting techniques appeared to be particularly effective in mitigating the negative effects of quantitative workload (4/4 significant interactions).

Conclusion

By demonstrating that job crafting can also buffer the negative impacts of high job demands on employee well-being, this study contributed to the JD-R model as it suggests that job crafting may even be possible under high work demands, and not only in resourceful jobs, as most previous studies have indicated. In addition to the top-down initiatives for improving employee well-being, bottom-up approaches such as job crafting may also be efficient in preventing burnout and enhancing work engagement.
Footnotes
1
This sample has been previously used in one study [35] which had different research questions and only one variable, i.e., exhaustion in common.
 
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Metadata
Title
High Job Demands, Still Engaged and Not Burned Out? The Role of Job Crafting
Authors
Jari J. Hakanen
Piia Seppälä
Maria C. W. Peeters
Publication date
01-08-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
International Journal of Behavioral Medicine / Issue 4/2017
Print ISSN: 1070-5503
Electronic ISSN: 1532-7558
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12529-017-9638-3

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