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Dive into the research topics where Matthew B. Perrigino is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew B. Perrigino.


The Academy of Management Annals | 2016

Resilience: A Review Using a Grounded Integrated Occupational Approach

Ellen Ernst Kossek; Matthew B. Perrigino

Resilience, the ability to adapt to adversity and endure job demands, is growing in prominence in the management literature with limited regard to occupational influences. Often examined at the ind...


Journal of Occupational Health Psychology | 2017

Caring for the Elderly at Work and Home: Can a Randomized Organizational Intervention Improve Psychological Health?

Ellen Ernst Kossek; Rebecca J. Thompson; Katie M. Lawson; Todd E. Bodner; Matthew B. Perrigino; Leslie B. Hammer; Orfeu M. Buxton; David M. Almeida; Phyllis Moen; David A. Hurtado; Brad Wipfli; Lisa F. Berkman; Jeremy W. Bray

Although job stress models suggest that changing the work social environment to increase job resources improves psychological health, many intervention studies have weak designs and overlook influences of family caregiving demands. We tested the effects of an organizational intervention designed to increase supervisor social support for work and nonwork roles, and job control in a results-oriented work environment on the stress and psychological distress of health care employees who care for the elderly, while simultaneously considering their own family caregiving responsibilities. Using a group-randomized organizational field trial with an intent-to-treat design, 420 caregivers in 15 intervention extended-care nursing facilities were compared with 511 caregivers in 15 control facilities at 4 measurement times: preintervention and 6, 12, and 18 months. There were no main intervention effects showing improvements in stress and psychological distress when comparing intervention with control sites. Moderation analyses indicate that the intervention was more effective in reducing stress and psychological distress for caregivers who were also caring for other family members off the job (those with elders and those “sandwiched” with both child and elder caregiving responsibilities) compared with employees without caregiving demands. These findings extend previous studies by showing that the effect of organizational interventions designed to increase job resources to improve psychological health varies according to differences in nonwork caregiving demands. This research suggests that caregivers, especially those with “double-duty” elder caregiving at home and work and “triple-duty” responsibilities, including child care, may benefit from interventions designed to increase work–nonwork social support and job control.


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2017

We're in This Together: The Influence of Employees' Work-Family Experiences on Other Individuals

Elizabeth A. Adair; Heidi M. Baumann; Catherine Kleshinski; Matthew B. Perrigino; Kevin Wynne

Recent advances in work-family research advocating for a systems perspective recognize the interdependence between employees and other individuals in their work and family domains. This perspective...


The Academy of Management Annals | 2018

Work–Family Backlash: The “Dark Side” of Work–Life Balance (WLB) Policies

Matthew B. Perrigino; Benjamin B. Dunford; Kelly Schwind Wilson


Occupational Health Science | 2018

Lasting Impression: Transformational Leadership and Family Supportive Supervision as Resources for Well-Being and Performance

Ellen Ernst Kossek; Ryan J. Petty; Todd E. Bodner; Matthew B. Perrigino; Leslie B. Hammer; Nanette L. Yragui; Jesse S. Michel


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2018

Does Agreement Always Matter? The Case of Moderately Satisfied Work Units

Matthew B. Perrigino; Ahmad M. Ashkanani; Benjamin B. Dunford


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2018

Leaving the Nested Structure: The Influence of Work Relationships on Climate Strength

Matthew B. Perrigino


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2017

When Everybody’s Blocked: Understanding Shared Perceptions of Workarounds and Workaround Behaviors

Matthew B. Perrigino


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2016

Work-Family Practice Variations: The Recursive Relationship between Work-Family Policies and Actors

Matthew B. Perrigino; Nina Granqvist


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2016

Generational Differences and the Acceptance of Infusion Pump Technology

Matthew B. Perrigino; Benjamin B. Dunford; Beverly J. Vermace; Sharon Tucker; Kenneth J. Rempher

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Todd E. Bodner

Portland State University

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David M. Almeida

Pennsylvania State University

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