Abstract
Background: Depression is one of the leading causes of work disability. Thus, it is important to explore possible ways to reduce its impact on employees.
Aims: The current research examined whether promoting job autonomy would attenuate the detrimental effect of depression on employees’ well-being.
Methods: Study 1 included the data from 5974 full-time employees from China. Full-time employees living in India, a collectivistic culture, and the United States, an individualistic culture, were recruited online in Study 2.
Results: Study 1 revealed that job autonomy moderated the influence of depression on job strain and perceived control mediated this interaction effect. Specifically, job autonomy weakened the detrimental effect of depression on job strain via weakening the association between depression and perceived control. The data from the 258 full-time employees in Study 2 replicated the findings and found that job autonomy had a stronger attenuating effect on the influence of depression in India than it had in the United States.
Conclusions: Job autonomy was found to be an effective way to reduce the negative impact of depression on employees’ well-being, a finding that should be considered when organizations develop their work policies.
Declaration of interest
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
The present research was funded by the grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China [71701219)] and the Humanities and Social Sciences Foundation of the Ministry of Education of China [16YJC190011].
Notes
1 Data used in Study 1 were from the China Labour-force Dynamics Survey (CLDS) by the Center for Social Science Survey at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, China. The opinions are the author’s alone. Please refer to http://css.sysu.edu.cn for more information about the CLDS.