“…Hence, conflict management has become a matter of increasing interest in organizations where workers' well-being and performance depends to a great extent on their social interactions with co-workers and customers (e.g., Behfar, Peterson, Mannix, & Trochim, 2008;Dijkstra, Beersma, & Evers, 2011;Dijkstra, de Dreu, Evers, & van Dierendonck, 2009;Friedman, Tidd, Currall, & Tsai, 2000;Giebels & Janssen, 2005;Greer, Jehn, & Mannix, 2008;Leon-Perez, Medina, Arenas, & Munduate, 2014;Tekleab, Quigley, & Tesluk, 2009). This is the case of healthcare settings, where conflict plays an important role in critical dynamics for organizational functioning, like the episodes of violence in a workplace that must deliver a high-quality service (e.g., Beech & Leather, 2006;Janss, Rispens, Segers, & Jehn, 2012). For example, the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO, 2013), an independent non-profit organisation that accredits and certifies healthcare organisations in the United States, considers that the establishment of procedures for conflict management within healthcare organisations is a key performance indicator, providing assurance that conflict will not prevent quality care or impinge upon patient safety.…”