Organizations have increasingly sought to adopt resilience-building programmes to prevent absenteeism, counterproductive work behaviour, and other stress-related issues. However, the effectiveness of these programmes remains unclear as a comprehensive review of existing primary evidence has not been undertaken. Using 42 independent samples across 37 studies, the present meta-analysis sought to address this limitation in the literature by summarizing the effectiveness of resilience-building programmes implemented in organizational contexts. Results demonstrated that the overall effect of such programmes was small (d=0.21) and that programme effects diminish over time (d(proximal)=0.26 vs. d(distal)=0.07). Alternatively, moderator analyses revealed that programmes targeting individuals thought to be at greater risk of experiencing stress and lacking core protective factors showed the opposite effect over time. Programmes employing a one-on-one delivery format (e.g., coaching) were most effective, followed by the classroom-based group delivery format. Programmes using train-the-trainer and computer-based delivery formats were least effective. Finally, substantially stronger effects were observed among studies employing single-group within-participant designs, in comparison with studies utilizing between-participant designs. Taken together, these findings provide important theoretical and practical implications for advancing the study and use of resilience-building in the workplace.
Can resilience be developed at work? A meta-analytic review of resilience-building programme effectiveness
Literatuur
Auteur(s)
Vanhove, Adam J.; Herian, Mitchel N.; Perez, Alycia L. U.; Harms, Peter D.; Lester, Paul B.
Jaar
2016
Bron
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY Volume: 89 Issue: 2 Pages: 278-307