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Sleep Leadership in High-Risk Occupations: An Investigation of Soldiers on Peacekeeping and Combat Missions
Authors:Brian C. Gunia  Maurice L. Sipos  Matthew LoPresti  Amy B. Adler
Affiliation:1. Carey Business School, Johns Hopkins University, and U.S. Army Medical Research Unit-Europe, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Sembach, Germanybrian.gunia@jhu.edu;3. Center for Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, Maryland;4. U.S. Army Medical Research Unit-Europe, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Sembach, Germany
Abstract:Individuals in high-risk occupations (e.g., military service) often report physical, psychological, and organizational problems. Although leaders can partially buffer their subordinates against these problems, the impact of established leadership skills appears limited, especially in high-risk occupations. Thus, building on recent theories of domain-specific leadership, we examined whether leadership focused on the specific domain of sleep might be negatively associated with some specific problems facing individuals in high-risk occupations, beyond their relationship with general leadership. Studying military personnel on peacekeeping and combat deployments, we predicted that “sleep leadership” would be negatively associated with sleep problems (physical), depressive symptoms (psychological), and negative climate (organizational), and that sleep would mediate the relationship between sleep leadership and the psychological and organizational problems. Results were generally supportive, contributing to theories of domain-specific leadership by showing that sleep-focused leader behaviors may go beyond general leadership behaviors, relating directly to the problems facing individuals in high-risk occupations.
Keywords:combat  leadership  peacekeeping  sleep  unit climate
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