“…Kanter's (1977) original six dimensions of structural empowerment has been studied extensively as distinctive and distinguishes the source of organizational power which leads to empowerment of employees (Laschinger, Almost, & Tuer, 2003; Laschinger & Finegan, 2005b; Laschinger, Finegan, & Shamian, 2001b; Laschinger, Finegan, Shamian, & Almost, 2001; Laschinger, Finegan, Shamian, & Wilk, 2003, 2001; Miller, Goddard, & Laschinger, 2000). Different studies have also associated structural empowerment and psychological empowerment with various behavioral and attitudinal consequences, such as job satisfaction (Casey, Saunders, & O'hara, 2010; Kõiv, Liik, & Heidmets, 2019; Schermuly, Schermuly, & Meyer, 2011), career satisfaction (Kong, Sun, & Yan, 2016), organizational commitment (Jha, 2011; Limpanitgul, Boonchoo, Kulviseachana, & Photiyarach, 2017; Raub & Robert, 2013), employee turnover intensions (Albrecht & Andreetta, 2011; Shah, Khattak, Zolin, & Shah, 2019), organizational citizenship behavior (Singh, Chand, Mittal, & Aggarwal, 2020; Singh and Singh 2019; Joo & Jo, 2017), lower levels of job strain, emotional exhaustion and job burnout (Ayala Calvo & García, 2018; Laschinger, Finegan, Shamian, & Wilk, 2001; Zhang, Ye, & Li, 2018). Empirical findings of the prior research depicted that employee's feel more empowered when employees participated in the decision‐making process (Kutzscher, 1994; Laschinger, Wong, McMahon, & Kaufmann, 1999), perceived control over nursing practice (Huffman, 1995; Laschinger et al, 1999; Laschinger & Havens, 1996) and job autonomy (Laschinger et al, 1999; Sabiston & Laschinger, 1995) which ultimately leads to innovative behavior at work (Helmy, Adawiyah, & Banani, 2019; Knol & Van Linge, 2009; Singh & Sarkar, 2019).…”