Enhancing Employee Self-Care: The Moderating Effect of Personal Initiative on Health-Specific Leadership
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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In: European Journal of Health Psychology, Vol. 25, No. 3, 07.2018, p. 96-106.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhancing Employee Self-Care
T2 - The Moderating Effect of Personal Initiative on Health-Specific Leadership
AU - Horstmann, David
PY - 2018/7
Y1 - 2018/7
N2 - The present study investigates the relationship between health-specific leadership and employee burnout. Health-specific leadership is a domain-specific leadership style that is characterized by the focus of leaders on employee well-being and their intentional support of employee health. Following the theory, I argue that managers influence employee burnout not only directly but also indirectly by encouraging employees to take care of their own health. Further, I extend the scope of previous research and argue that managers’ personal initiative acts as a moderator for health-specific leadership; as indicated by previous research, proactivity is crucial for effective leadership behavior. A cross-sectional questionnaire study (n = 525) was conducted. Health-specific leadership, managers’ personal initiative, employee self-care, and employee burnout symptoms have been measured. A moderated mediation was tested using structural equation modeling. The findings confirm a positive relationship between health-specific leadership and employee burnout. As expected, this relationship is partially mediated by employee self-care. Managers’ personal initiative shows an interaction effect on employee self-care but not on burnout symptoms. The study results verify the concept of health-specific leadership and highlight the importance of proactive leadership behavior as a facilitator for health-specific leadership. Finally, implications for leadership research and practice are provided.
AB - The present study investigates the relationship between health-specific leadership and employee burnout. Health-specific leadership is a domain-specific leadership style that is characterized by the focus of leaders on employee well-being and their intentional support of employee health. Following the theory, I argue that managers influence employee burnout not only directly but also indirectly by encouraging employees to take care of their own health. Further, I extend the scope of previous research and argue that managers’ personal initiative acts as a moderator for health-specific leadership; as indicated by previous research, proactivity is crucial for effective leadership behavior. A cross-sectional questionnaire study (n = 525) was conducted. Health-specific leadership, managers’ personal initiative, employee self-care, and employee burnout symptoms have been measured. A moderated mediation was tested using structural equation modeling. The findings confirm a positive relationship between health-specific leadership and employee burnout. As expected, this relationship is partially mediated by employee self-care. Managers’ personal initiative shows an interaction effect on employee self-care but not on burnout symptoms. The study results verify the concept of health-specific leadership and highlight the importance of proactive leadership behavior as a facilitator for health-specific leadership. Finally, implications for leadership research and practice are provided.
KW - Health sciences
KW - employee health
KW - proactivity
KW - well-being
KW - burnout
KW - strucutral equation modeling
U2 - 10.1027/2512-8442/a000014
DO - 10.1027/2512-8442/a000014
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 25
SP - 96
EP - 106
JO - European Journal of Health Psychology
JF - European Journal of Health Psychology
SN - 2512-8442
IS - 3
ER -