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Role of affective commitment in the relationship between emotional labor and life satisfaction in nurses

Abstract

Purpose

This study investigated relationships between hospice nurses’ emotional labor, life satisfaction, and affective commitment (moderator). We started with the assumption that displaying real emotions rather than faking them may increase life satisfaction.

Design and Methods

The study utilized a cross-sectional survey data analysis. A total of 322 nurses participated in the study. Hayes’ process examined the moderation relationship predicting emotional labor and life satisfaction.

Findings

The results showed that emotional labor partially affected life satisfaction. However, those effects varied at different levels of affective commitment and interestingly diminished at a high level.

Practice Implications

Nurse leaders should understand and transform the surface emotional setting of nurses to more profound acting emotions and then to natural emotional responses, which otherwise can generate emotional conflict causing unsatisfactory life.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 02/02/2022 | Link to this post on IFP |
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