Effort-reward imbalance, resilience and perceived organizational support: A moderated mediation model of fatigue in chinese nurses

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Abstract

Purpose: Fatigue undermines nurses’ well-being and work performance worldwide. Work stress is a critical factor that causes nurses’ fatigue, but the solutions are not well known. This study aimed to identify the moderated mediation model of fatigue involving effort-reward imbalance (ERI), resilience and perceived organizational support (POS) in Chinese nurses. Methods: In a cross-sectional investigation conducted in Liaoning Province of China, 996 nurses completed the self-administered measurements of fatigue, ERI, resilience and POS. Moderated mediation was tested using the PROCESS procedure. The “pick-a-point” method was adopted to assess conditional effect on fatigue. Results: The indirect effect of ERI on fatigue through resilience was significant (a×b = 0.119, BCa 95% CI: 0.094 to 0.146), indicating a partial mediation of resilience. POS moderated the association of resilience with fatigue (β = −0.056, p = 0.006). The higher the level of POS was, the stronger the resilience-fatigue association became. Thus, the mediating role of resilience in the ERI-fatigue association was gradually increased with the increase of POS level (low POS: 0.073; moderate POS: 0.095; high POS: 0.116). Conclusion: Resilience could partially mediate the ERI-fatigue association. POS could act as a moderator that enhanced the association of resilience with fatigue. A moderated mediation model of fatigue was demonstrated in Chinese nurses. Managers should establish a balanced social reciprocity, and improve nurses’ resilience and POS in order to decrease nurses’ fatigue.

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Liu, L., Wu, D., Wang, L., Qu, Y., & Wu, H. (2020). Effort-reward imbalance, resilience and perceived organizational support: A moderated mediation model of fatigue in chinese nurses. Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, 13, 893–901. https://doi.org/10.2147/RMHP.S259339

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