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Adaptation to work: An analysis of employee health, withdrawal, and change
Authors:Joseph G. Rosse  Charles L. Hulin
Affiliation:University of Colorado at Boulder USA;University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign USA
Abstract:J. Rosse and H. Miller (1984, in P. Goodman, R. Atkin et al., Absenteeism: New Approaches to understanding, measuring, and managing employee absence. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass) have proposed a model of employee adaptation that hypothesizes multiple withdrawal behaviors and attempts to change working conditions as alternative forms of adaptation to a dissatisfying work environment. Negative health outcomes are also hypothesized consequences of dissatisfaction with work. In this longitudinal study of 42 new hospital employees, intention to quit, turnover, absence, attempts to change the job, and heatlh disorders were negatively correlated with job satisfaction; lateness and self-report avoidance scale were not. Use of adaptive behaviors was also found to have remedial effects for employee health. Implications for a general model of adaptation are discussed.
Keywords:Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Joseph G. Rosse   College of Business and Administration   University of Colorado   Campus Box 419   Boulder   CO 80309.
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