Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, volume 27, issue 3, pages 317-338

A meta-analysis of experienced incivility and its correlates: Exploring the dual path model of experienced workplace incivility.

Alexandra C. Chris
Yannick Provencher
Cody Fogg
Serena C. Thompson
Ashley L. Cole
Obehi Okaka
Frank A. Bosco
M. Gloria González-Morales
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-05-09
scimago Q1
SJR2.169
CiteScore8.2
Impact factor5.9
ISSN10768998, 19391307
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Applied Psychology
Abstract
The present study proposes and examines a theoretical Dual Path Model of Experienced Workplace Incivility using meta-analytic relationships (k = 246; N = 145, 008) between experienced incivility and frequent correlates. The stress-induced mechanism was supported with perceived stress mediating the meta-analytical relationship between experienced incivility and occupational health (i.e., emotional exhaustion and somatic complaints). The commitment-induced mechanism was also supported with affective commitment to the organization mediating the relationship between experienced incivility and organizational correlates (i.e., job satisfaction and turnover intentions). However, these paths were not able to explain the strong relationship between experienced and enacted workplace incivility. Moderating analysis revealed that the experienced-enactment link is stronger between coworkers, in comparison to incivility experienced from supervisors; experienced incivility is more strongly related to organizational correlates, when incivility is enacted by supervisors in comparison to coworkers, and in human service samples when compared to samples comprised of mixed occupations. We discuss theoretical and practical implications as well as directions for future research. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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