Occupational stress : type A behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain

Bibliography: pages 333-360. === To study Type A behaviour as a moderator of relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain, 234 volunteer subjects from a medium-sized life insurance society completed three questionnaires under standardized testing conditions, tapping Ty...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Forshaw, Brendan Mark
Other Authors: Du Preez, Peter
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17016
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-170162020-10-06T05:11:43Z Occupational stress : type A behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain Forshaw, Brendan Mark Du Preez, Peter Psychology Organisational Psychology Stress Bibliography: pages 333-360. To study Type A behaviour as a moderator of relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain, 234 volunteer subjects from a medium-sized life insurance society completed three questionnaires under standardized testing conditions, tapping Type A behaviour (Session 1) and various role dimensions (Session 2) and indices of strain (Session 3). Absenteeism data were taken from employee record cards, as were data for some demographic and organizational variables (race and sex), while others, (company tenure, age and organizational level) were explored in the questionnaires. Assessment sessions were staggered, with one-month intervals between each, to reduce the effects of response sets. Factor analysis of responses to the role dimensions questionnaire confirmed the hypothesized factor structure and led to the development of scales for role conflict, ambiguity, overload and qualitative underload. The reliability and validity of these scales are discussed. Partial correlations (with the linear effects of the demographic and organizational variables removed) and multiple linear regressions indicate that role conflict, ambiguity, overload and underload may be described as social-psychological stressors, in terms of psychological strain, while only underload is weakly related to absenteeism. Type A behaviour is not found to moderate relationships between stressors and strain, with the exception of an effect for underload which may be accounted for in statistical, rather than psychological, terms. Results are interpreted as evidence of the need for improved work design and redesign, particularly in South African organizations. Implications of findings with respect to sequential models of strain, as well as the nature of the relationship between Type A behaviour and CHD, are discussed. 2016-02-15T07:12:18Z 2016-02-15T07:12:18Z 1985 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17016 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities Department of Psychology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Organisational Psychology
Stress
spellingShingle Psychology
Organisational Psychology
Stress
Forshaw, Brendan Mark
Occupational stress : type A behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain
description Bibliography: pages 333-360. === To study Type A behaviour as a moderator of relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain, 234 volunteer subjects from a medium-sized life insurance society completed three questionnaires under standardized testing conditions, tapping Type A behaviour (Session 1) and various role dimensions (Session 2) and indices of strain (Session 3). Absenteeism data were taken from employee record cards, as were data for some demographic and organizational variables (race and sex), while others, (company tenure, age and organizational level) were explored in the questionnaires. Assessment sessions were staggered, with one-month intervals between each, to reduce the effects of response sets. Factor analysis of responses to the role dimensions questionnaire confirmed the hypothesized factor structure and led to the development of scales for role conflict, ambiguity, overload and qualitative underload. The reliability and validity of these scales are discussed. Partial correlations (with the linear effects of the demographic and organizational variables removed) and multiple linear regressions indicate that role conflict, ambiguity, overload and underload may be described as social-psychological stressors, in terms of psychological strain, while only underload is weakly related to absenteeism. Type A behaviour is not found to moderate relationships between stressors and strain, with the exception of an effect for underload which may be accounted for in statistical, rather than psychological, terms. Results are interpreted as evidence of the need for improved work design and redesign, particularly in South African organizations. Implications of findings with respect to sequential models of strain, as well as the nature of the relationship between Type A behaviour and CHD, are discussed.
author2 Du Preez, Peter
author_facet Du Preez, Peter
Forshaw, Brendan Mark
author Forshaw, Brendan Mark
author_sort Forshaw, Brendan Mark
title Occupational stress : type A behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain
title_short Occupational stress : type A behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain
title_full Occupational stress : type A behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain
title_fullStr Occupational stress : type A behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain
title_full_unstemmed Occupational stress : type A behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain
title_sort occupational stress : type a behaviour as a moderator of the relationships between role demands and psychological and behavioural strain
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17016
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