Login / Signup

Front-line employees' perceived COVID-19 event strength and emotional labor in the service industry: A moderated mediation model.

Jianghong DuZhenyuan WangYunhui Xie
Published in: The Journal of general psychology (2023)
COVID-19 pandemic has brought enormous challenges to employees worldwide, and thus, it is important to understand whether, how, and when perceived COVID-19 event strength can influence employees' work-related outcomes. Drawing on event system theory and affective events theory, this study examined the effect of perceived COVID-19 event strength on front-line service employees' emotional labor, namely, surface acting and deep acting, through the mediating role of anxiety. In addition, it explored job insecurity as a moderator in the relationship between perceived COVID-19 event strength and anxiety. This study analyzed two-wave data ( N  = 191) collected from front-line employees in the service industry and found that anxiety mediated the relationship between perceived COVID-19 event strength and surface acting but not deep acting, and that job insecurity moderated the relationship between perceived COVID-19 event strength and anxiety and the indirect effect of perceived COVID-19 event strength on surface acting but not on deep acting via anxiety. Implications and directions for future research are also discussed.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • social support
  • sars cov
  • mental health
  • depressive symptoms
  • physical activity
  • healthcare
  • sleep quality
  • adipose tissue
  • bipolar disorder
  • insulin resistance
  • glycemic control