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Date: April 29, 2001
Contact: Pam Willenz
Public Affairs Office
(202) 336-5707

HOW PEOPLE PERCEIVE PERSONAL CONTROL WHEN COPING WITH DEMANDING JOBS CAN MAKE THEM MORE VULNERABLE TO COLDS AND THE FLU, SAYS NEW STUDY

First Empirical Study Shows Link Between Job Stress, Job Control And Susceptibility to Respiratory Infections

Washington - Having high levels of control over one's job responsibilities can backfire if a person lacks confidence on the job or has a propensity to take responsibility for negative outcomes at work, says new research. Such a combination of control and responsibility-taking can make work more stressful and make a person more vulnerable to infections, like bronchitis, influenza or even the common cold. These findings are reported on in the April issue of the Journal of Applied Psychology, published by the American Psychological Association (APA).

A combination of personality and job factors seem to put some people at risk for getting sick but not others in similar jobs, said researchers John Schaubroeck, Ph.D., at Drexel University, James R. Jones, Ph.D., at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and Jia Lin Xie, Ph.D., at the University of Toronto. To find out which employees working for a survey research organization experienced stress from their demanding jobs when in a high or low job control situation, the researchers asked 217 employees about the following characteristics of their jobs: being responsible for other people; dealing with complex issues and information; and being able to control how tasks are carried out. The employees were also asked how much confidence they had in doing their job effectively and their personal style for attributing responsibility when things go wrong on the job. Some of the jobs studied were market researcher interviewer, data analyst and building maintenance deputy.

Furthermore, to determine whether employee's stress levels were making them more susceptible to bacterial and viral infections, their levels of immunoglobulin-A (IgA) antibodies from saliva and respiratory symptoms were measured. The IgA antibodies attack disease cells that are associated with upper respiratory infections.

Employees who perceived they had control over their job responsibilities but didn't have confidence in their problem-solving abilities or who blamed themselves for bad outcomes were the most likely to experience the most stress. Those type of job situations appeared to put these employees at a higher risk for getting infections indicated by their respiratory symptoms (sore throat, cough, flu) and saliva results that showed lower levels of the IgA antibodies, said Dr. Schaubroeck.

"Our findings show that employees who don't have confidence in their skills may find job control debilitating because they cannot utilize it effectively to cope with the demands of the job," explain the authors. "Rather than being an asset, job control becomes a source of continual frustration and vehicle for self-blame. The employees that have confidence in their skills seem to be more effective at utilizing job control to cope better with stressful job situations."

In most cases, employees who saw themselves as having control over their working conditions and did not blame themselves for negative outcomes suffered the least amount of stress even in a demanding job. They had higher levels of IgA in their saliva and did not have as many respiratory illnesses as the employees in similar job situations but who did blame themselves for bad outcomes.

For these individuals who have proclivity for self-blame, say the authors, having less control in a high demand atmosphere may be beneficial because it makes it possible for them to attribute their failings to an external cause rather than take it on themselves. Schaubroeck and his colleagues have obtained similar findings in other studies that assessed blood pressure, psychological symptoms and illness-related absenteeism.

"The experience of stress seems to depend on whether the individual believes he or she should be able to prevent negative outcomes from occurring," said Dr. Schaubroeck. "For a long time studies have reported that having more control is desirable from the standpoint of coping with stress, but these studies did not examine particular subpopulations of people who may buck this trend. Our research shows that increasing job control can be harmful for individuals who lack the capacity to use it or for who the control deepens their self-blame when things go wrong."

Article: "Individual Differences in Utilizing Control to Cope With Job Demands: Effects on Susceptibility to Infectious Disease," John Schaubroeck, Ph.D., Drexel University; James R. Jones, Ph.D., University of Nebraska at Omaha; and Jia Lin Xie, Ph.D., University of Toronto and City University of Hong Kong; Journal of Applied Psychology, Vol. 86, No. 2.

Full text of the article is available from the APA Public Affairs Office or at http://www.apa.org/journals/features/apl862265.pdf

John Schaubroeck, Ph.D. can be reached by telephone at work (215) 895-1792, home (610) 446-8758

The American Psychological Association (APA), in Washington, DC, is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States and is the world's largest association of psychologists. APA's membership includes more than 155,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 53 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 59 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession and as a means of promoting human welfare.

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