Disrespect at Work, Distress at Home: A Longitudinal Investigation of Incivility Spillover and Crossover Among Older Workers.
Lisa A MarchiondoGwenith G FisherLilia M CortinaRussell A MatthewsPublished in: Work, aging and retirement (2020)
The prevalence of workplace mistreatment toward older adults is well-documented, yet its effects are understudied. We applied the strength and vulnerability integration model (SAVI) to hypothesize that, despite its low intensity, workplace incivility has numerous deleterious outcomes for older employees over time. Specifically, we investigated whether and how incivility relates to well-being outside of work, among both targeted employees and their partners. We drew on affective events theory to examine how incivility "spills over" to older targets' personal lives. We also tested whether incivility is potent enough to "crossover" to the well-being of older targets' partners at home. Based on longitudinal data from a national study of older workers (N = 598; 299 couples), results demonstrate that workplace incivility related to decrements in targets' affective well-being, which in turn, was associated with life dissatisfaction, interference with work, and lower overall health. Workplace incivility also predicted declines in partner well-being, although these crossover effects varied by gender: Men's postincivility affective well-being predicted their female partners' life satisfaction but not vice versa. However, women's uncivil experiences directly related to the affective well-being of their male partners. These results suggest that for both older workers and their partners, the harms of incivility eventually extend beyond the organizations where they originate.
Keyphrases
- middle aged
- community dwelling
- physical activity
- hiv testing
- bipolar disorder
- health promotion
- mental health
- open label
- healthcare
- men who have sex with men
- public health
- randomized controlled trial
- double blind
- clinical trial
- quality improvement
- placebo controlled
- metabolic syndrome
- climate change
- electronic health record
- risk factors
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- health information
- antiretroviral therapy
- anti inflammatory
- living cells
- intimate partner violence
- pregnancy outcomes