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Dive into the research topics where Alyssa K. McGonagle is active.

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Featured researches published by Alyssa K. McGonagle.


Applied Ergonomics | 2008

What aspects of shiftwork influence off-shift well-being of healthcare workers?

Janet L. Barnes-Farrell; Kimberly Davies-Schrils; Alyssa K. McGonagle; Benjamin M. Walsh; Lee Di Milia; Frida Marina Fischer; Barbara B. Hobbs; Ljiljana Kaliterna; Donald I. Tepas

Characteristics of shiftwork schedules have implications for off-shift well-being. We examined the extent to which several shift characteristics (e.g., shift length, working sundays) are associated with three aspects of off-shift well-being: work-to-family conflict, physical well-being, and mental well-being. We also investigated whether these relationships differed in four nations. The Survey of Work and Time was completed by 906 healthcare professionals located in Australia, Brazil, Croatia, and the USA. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses supported the hypothesis that shiftwork characteristics account for significant unique variance in all three measures of well-being beyond that accounted for by work and family demands and personal characteristics. The patterns of regression weights indicated that particular shiftwork characteristics have differential relevance to indices of work-to-family conflict, physical well-being, and mental well-being. Our findings suggest that healthcare organizations should carefully consider the implications of shiftwork characteristics for off-shift well-being. Furthermore, although our findings did not indicate national differences in the nature of relationships between shift characteristics and well-being, shiftwork characteristics and demographics for healthcare professionals differ in systematic ways among nations; as such, effective solutions may be context-specific.


European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology | 2014

Demands, resources, and work ability: A cross-national examination of health care workers

Alyssa K. McGonagle; Janet L. Barnes-Farrell; Lee Di Milia; Frida Marina Fischer; Barbara B. Hobbs; Irena Iskra-Golec; Ljiljana Kaliterna; Lawrence Smith

Understanding work ability, with the goal of promoting it, is important for individuals as well as organizations. It is especially important to study work ability in health care workers, who face many work-related challenges that may threaten work ability. We studied various job demands, job resources, and interactions of demands and resources relating to work ability using the Job Demands–Resources model as a framework. Acute care health care workers from six nations (US, Australia, UK, Brazil, Croatia, and Poland) completed a survey. Role demands related to work ability in the Australia sample only, and supervisor support related to work ability in the Australia sample only. Yet, high levels of supervisor support significantly moderated (buffered) negative relationships between physical demands and work ability in the US sample, along with negative relationships between role demands and work ability in both the Croatia and UK samples. Skill discretion related to work ability in every nation sample, and therefore appears to be particularly important to work ability perceptions. In addition, skill discretion moderated (buffered) a negative relationship between role demands and work ability in the Australia sample. We therefore recommend that interventions to help preserve or improve work ability target this important job resource.


AAOHN Journal | 2016

Burnout and Engagement: Relative Importance of Predictors and Outcomes in Two Health Care Worker Samples

Zachary L. Fragoso; Kyla J. Holcombe; Courtney L. McCluney; Gwenith G. Fisher; Alyssa K. McGonagle; Susan J. Friebe

This study’s purpose was twofold: first, to examine the relative importance of job demands and resources as predictors of burnout and engagement, and second, the relative importance of engagement and burnout related to health, depressive symptoms, work ability, organizational commitment, and turnover intentions in two samples of health care workers. Nurse leaders (n = 162) and licensed emergency medical technicians (EMTs; n = 102) completed surveys. In both samples, job demands predicted burnout more strongly than job resources, and job resources predicted engagement more strongly than job demands. Engagement held more weight than burnout for predicting commitment, and burnout held more weight for predicting health outcomes, depressive symptoms, and work ability. Results have implications for the design, evaluation, and effectiveness of workplace interventions to reduce burnout and improve engagement among health care workers. Actionable recommendations for increasing engagement and decreasing burnout in health care organizations are provided.


Journal of Managerial Psychology | 2016

Anticipated work discrimination scale: a chronic illness application

Alyssa K. McGonagle; Adam Roebuck; Hannah Diebel; Justin J. Aqwa; Zachary L. Fragoso; Sarah Stoddart

Purpose – The authors sought initial validity evidence for a measure of anticipated discrimination in the workplace using three samples of working adults with various chronic illnesses. The purpose of this paper is to propose a single factor structure, correlations with stigma dimensions, discriminant validity from similar scales, and incremental validity in predicting work-related outcomes. Design/methodology/approach – Adults working at least 20 hours per week with various chronic illnesses (Sample 1 n=332, Sample 2 n=193, Sample 3 n=230) voluntarily completed an online survey. Structural equation modeling and hierarchical multiple regression were used to analyze the data. Findings – Results supported the proposed single-factor structure, along with proposed correlations with strain, and job attitudes (job satisfaction, affective commitment, and both procedural justice). Discriminant validity was observed between anticipated discrimination and procedural justice perceptions and perceived impact on perfo...


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2012

A Dark Side of Coping with Chronic Illness Stigma at Work

Alyssa K. McGonagle

Workers with chronic health conditions may feel stigmatized at work, where ill health is thought to conflict with productivity and reliability. Threat of stigmatization is a stressor that can lead to strains. Certain responses to stigma threat (coping strategies) may also play a fundamental role in the strain process. We hypothesized that threat of stigmatization based on chronic illness would relate to job-induced tension and absenteeism, and that these relationships would be mediated by work-related engagement and disengagement coping. Additionally, we identified two potential moderators of these mediated relationships: work centrality and continuance commitment. We surveyed 315 individuals who were working at least 30 hours per week and had at least one chronic illness or health condition. As expected, stigmatization threat significantly related to both job-induced tension and absenteeism. Also, work-related engagement coping mediated the relationship between stigma threat and job-induced tension, and ...


Accident Analysis & Prevention | 2010

Relationships between psychological safety climate facets and safety behavior in the rail industry: A dominance analysis

Stephanie Morrow; Alyssa K. McGonagle; Megan Dove-Steinkamp; Curtis Walker; Matthew Marmet; Janet L. Barnes-Farrell


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2015

Individual and work factors related to perceived work ability and labor force outcomes.

Alyssa K. McGonagle; Gwenith G. Fisher; Janet L. Barnes-Farrell; James W. Grosch


Journal of Business and Psychology | 2016

Four Research Designs and a Comprehensive Analysis Strategy for Investigating Common Method Variance with Self-Report Measures Using Latent Variables

Larry J. Williams; Alyssa K. McGonagle


Journal of Safety Research | 2010

Work-safety tension, perceived risk, and worker injuries: A meso-mediational model

Alyssa K. McGonagle; Lisa M. Kath


Stress and Health | 2014

Chronic illness in the workplace: Stigma, identity threat and strain

Alyssa K. McGonagle; Janet L. Barnes-Farrell

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Benjamin M. Walsh

University of Illinois at Springfield

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Barbara B. Hobbs

South Dakota State University

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Lee Di Milia

Central Queensland University

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Donald I. Tepas

University of Connecticut

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