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The meditating effect of a psychological wellbeing profile in the bullying and turnover intention relation

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dc.contributor.advisor Coetzee, Melinde
dc.contributor.author Van Dyk, Jeannette
dc.date.accessioned 2017-04-12T09:38:17Z
dc.date.available 2017-04-12T09:38:17Z
dc.date.issued 2016-06
dc.identifier.citation Van Dyk, Jeannette (2016) The meditating effect of a psychological wellbeing profile in the bullying and turnover intention relation, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22265>
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/22265
dc.description.abstract The research focused on constructing a psychological wellbeing profile for employee wellness and talent retention practices by investigating employees’ psychological wellbeing-related attributes (constituting self-esteem, emotional intelligence, hardiness, work engagement and psychosocial flourishing), and whether these significantly mediate the relation between their experiences of bullying and their intention to leave the organisation when controlling for bullying, age, gender, race, tenure and job level. A quantitative survey was conducted on a convenience sample of employed adults (N = 373) of different age, gender, race, tenure and job level groups from various South African organisations. The canonical statistical procedures indicated work engagement (vigour, dedication and absorption) and hardiness (commitment-alienation) as the strongest psychological wellbeing-related dispositional attributes in the workplace bullying and turnover intention relationship. The mediation modelling results showed that workplace bullying significantly predicted turnover intention, which in turn, significantly predicted either high/low levels of work engagement (vigour and dedication) in one’s work. Self-esteem, emotional intelligence or hardiness did not seem likely to influence the relationship between workplace bullying and turnover intention. The multiple regression analysis indicated that participants’ biographical variables (age, gender, race and job level) significantly predicted workplace bullying, self-esteem, emotional intelligence, hardiness, work engagement and psychosocial flourishing, and turnover intention. The tests for significant mean differences indicated that participants from various biographical groups (age, gender, race, tenure and job level) statistically significantly differed regarding workplace bullying (independent variable), the psychological wellbeing-related variables, namely self-esteem, emotional intelligence, hardiness, employee engagement, psychosocial flourishing (mediating variables) and turnover intention (dependent variable). On a theoretical level, the study deepened understanding of the cognitive, affective and conative behavioural dimensions of the hypothesised psychological wellbeing profile. On an empirical level, the main findings were reported and interpreted in terms of an empirically derived psychological wellbeing profile based on the work engagement of the participants. On a practical level, the findings provided valuable guidelines for the development of talent retention and wellness interventions, which might add to the body of knowledge relating to psychological wellbeing-related dispositional attributes that influenced workplace bullying and talent retention en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xxiv, 583 leaves) : illustrations (some color)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Wellbeing profile en
dc.subject Self-esteem en
dc.subject Emotional intelligence en
dc.subject Hardiness en
dc.subject Work engagement en
dc.subject Psychological wellbeing en
dc.subject Employee wellness en
dc.subject Workplace bullying en
dc.subject Turnover intention en
dc.subject Intention to leave en
dc.subject Voluntary turnover en
dc.subject.ddc 658.38
dc.subject.lcsh Bullying in the workplace en
dc.subject.lcsh Labor turnover en
dc.subject.lcsh Emotional intelligence en
dc.subject.lcsh Job stress -- Prevention en
dc.title The meditating effect of a psychological wellbeing profile in the bullying and turnover intention relation en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Industrial and Organisational Psychology en
dc.description.degree D. Com. (Industrial and Organisational Psychology)


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