2021
DOI: 10.1037/ocp0000271
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Depending on your own kindness: The moderating role of self-compassion on the within-person consequences of work loneliness during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Abstract: The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has transformed the way we work, with many employees working under isolating and difficult conditions. However, research on the antecedents, consequences, and buffers of work loneliness is scarce. Integrating research on need for belonging, regulatory loop models of loneliness, and self-compassion, the current study addresses this critical issue by developing and testing a conceptual model that highlights how COVID-related stressors frustrate employees' need for belonging (i… Show more

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Cited by 77 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 84 publications
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“…Leadership styles, behaviors, and performance management strategies may all require adjustment, and research is needed to understand how leadership of fully remote or teleworking teams can promote or detract from healthy work design and worker well-being. Of particular concern are issues surrounding technostress and worker isolation [87,88], which require greater research attention. Remote work during the pandemic has been linked to fatigue and depression [87,88] while home confinement has been associated with decreased physical activity and less healthy eating [89], although research is needed to understand the extent to which this was due to the particular circumstances of remote work during the pandemic.…”
Section: Implications 241 Implications For Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Leadership styles, behaviors, and performance management strategies may all require adjustment, and research is needed to understand how leadership of fully remote or teleworking teams can promote or detract from healthy work design and worker well-being. Of particular concern are issues surrounding technostress and worker isolation [87,88], which require greater research attention. Remote work during the pandemic has been linked to fatigue and depression [87,88] while home confinement has been associated with decreased physical activity and less healthy eating [89], although research is needed to understand the extent to which this was due to the particular circumstances of remote work during the pandemic.…”
Section: Implications 241 Implications For Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of particular concern are issues surrounding technostress and worker isolation [87,88], which require greater research attention. Remote work during the pandemic has been linked to fatigue and depression [87,88] while home confinement has been associated with decreased physical activity and less healthy eating [89], although research is needed to understand the extent to which this was due to the particular circumstances of remote work during the pandemic. Additionally, the proliferation of electronic performance monitoring (EPM), which involves tracking software, raises challenges for employee privacy, trust, and their consequent effects on well-being [90,91].…”
Section: Implications 241 Implications For Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Cigna's national survey of 10,400 adults working in the US, for example, found a 7% increase in loneliness from their 2018 survey (Nemecek, 2020). Loneliness is a psychologically painful emotion that results from people's subjective feelings that their intimate, social, and "sense of belonging" needs are not being met (Cacioppo et al, 2006;Andel et al, 2021).…”
Section: Work Lonelinessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The formation of trust, reciprocity, and identification within the organization create a special kind of capital, that is, relational capital [ 7 ]. Since COVID-related stressors can frustrate employees’ sense of belonging, increase their sense of insecurity, and have a negative impact on their behaviors [ 8 ], it is meaningful for us to explore whether mutual trust and cooperation within the organization and a high degree of identification can help medical staff have a positive sense of belonging so as to better engage in work and obtain growth opportunities during the COVID-19 crisis; namely, can relationship capital promote the occurrence of post-traumatic growth by improving the individual’s psychological security? In particular, when the individual has a high sense of work meaning, will this promotion effect be strengthened?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%