The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health

Peters E, Reimann M, Diewald M (2023)
Soziale Welt 74(1): 88-115.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Abstract / Bemerkung
This paper explores the heterogeneous effects of the COVID-19 pande-mic on employees' well-being regarding their work-life conflicts and self-rated health. Following the stress of higher status and resources of higher status hypotheses, we compared employees with and without supervisory responsibility. We used the third wave of a longitudinal linked employer-employee dataset (LEEP-B3) conduc-ted in 2018/19 and a COVID-19 follow-up survey conducted in late 2020, provi-ding information on 733 employees in establishments having more than 500 employees. Thus, we provide a longitudinal perspective covering the situation before the pandemic and possible pandemic-induced changes. We found that super-visory responsibility offered a comparative advantage for decreasing work-life con-flict during the pandemic, but no such difference was detected among non -supervi-sors. However, there was no significant difference between employees with and without supervisory responsibility for self-rated health. Self-rated health status decreased during the pandemic in both groups to a similar degree. Our results indi-cate that having supervisory responsibility during the COVID-19 pandemic can be a double-edged sword, acting as both a resource and a stressor when it comes to employees' work-life conflict and self-rated health.
Stichworte
COVID-19; Work-Life Conflict; Self-Rated Health; Supervisory; Responsibility; Ger-many
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Zeitschriftentitel
Soziale Welt
Band
74
Ausgabe
1
Seite(n)
88-115
ISSN
0038-6073
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2969833

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Peters E, Reimann M, Diewald M. The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health. Soziale Welt . 2023;74(1):88-115.
Peters, E., Reimann, M., & Diewald, M. (2023). The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health. Soziale Welt , 74(1), 88-115. https://doi.org/10.5771/0038-6073-2023-1-88
Peters, Eileen, Reimann, Mareike, and Diewald, Martin. 2023. “The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health”. Soziale Welt 74 (1): 88-115.
Peters, E., Reimann, M., and Diewald, M. (2023). The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health. Soziale Welt 74, 88-115.
Peters, E., Reimann, M., & Diewald, M., 2023. The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health. Soziale Welt , 74(1), p 88-115.
E. Peters, M. Reimann, and M. Diewald, “The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health”, Soziale Welt , vol. 74, 2023, pp. 88-115.
Peters, E., Reimann, M., Diewald, M.: The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health. Soziale Welt . 74, 88-115 (2023).
Peters, Eileen, Reimann, Mareike, and Diewald, Martin. “The stress and resources of higher status hypotheses in light of COVID-19: Effects on work-life conflict and self-rated health”. Soziale Welt 74.1 (2023): 88-115.
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