Coping and distress in organizations : the role of gender in work stress / M. Gloria Gonzalez-Morales, Jose M. Peiro, Isabel Rodriguez, Esther R. Greenglass
Series: International Journal of Stress Management. 13 : 2, pages 228-248 Publication details: May 2006Content type:- text
- volume
- unmediated
Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Manila Tytana Colleges Library REFERENCE SECTION | Not for loan |
This article investigates the positive value of women's interpersonal way of coping by examining coping benefits on distress depending on gender socialization in the Spanish cultural context. The participants were 332 men and 129 women employed by financial companies. Preliminary results showed that women used social support coping more frequently than men, whereas there were no gender differences in the use of direct action coping. Interactive effects of gender in the relationship between coping strategies and distress and psychosomatic complaints were found; social support coping was only beneficial for women, whereas direct action coping was more beneficial for men than for women. Implications of these results and their significance within the framework of national and sector cultures are discussed.
Psychology.
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