← Back
Publicaciones

How Does Positive Work-Related Stress Affect the Degree of Innovation Development?

Authors

Albort-Morant, Gema , ARIZA MONTES, JOSÉ ANTONIO, LEAL RODRÍGUEZ, ANTONIO LUIS, Giorgi, Gabriele

External publication

No

Means

Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

3.39

SJR Impact

0.747

Publication date

14/01/2020

ISI

000516827400141

Scopus Id

2-s2.0-85078029554

Abstract

Many studies sustain that work-related stress exerts pervasive consequences on the employees' levels of performance, productivity, and wellbeing. However, it remains unclear whether certain levels of stress might lead to positive outcomes regarding employees' innovativeness. Hence, this paper examines how the five dimensions of work-related stress impact on the employees' levels of innovation performance. To this aim, this study focused on a sample of 1487 employees from six Italian companies. To test the research hypotheses under assessment, we relied on the use of the partial least squares (PLS) technique. Our results reveal that, in summary, the stressors job autonomy, job demands, and role ambiguity exert a positive and significant impact on the employees' levels of innovativeness. However, this study failed to find evidence that the supervisors' support-innovation and colleagues' support-innovation links are not statistically significant.

Keywords

innovation; least squares method; mental health; occupational exposure; working conditions; article; employee; human; job stress; partial least squares regression; Italy

Universidad Loyola members