Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator

The issue of managing the balance between the context of work and life among nurses is an evident fact in Malaysia, which potentially was due to the job nature of nurses and one’s own personal commitments. Boundary management is a method in which people use to address their work-life balance conditi...

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Main Authors: Carlina Natalia, Singiau, Nur Fatihah, Abdullah Bandar, Rekaya, Vincent Balang, Zaiton, Hassan, Dayang Kartini, Abang Ibrahim, Rusli, Ahmad, Hana, Hamidi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hampstead Psychological Associates 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/29556/1/Carlina%20Natalia%20%20Singiau.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/29556/
https://www.psychosocial.com/
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Institution: Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
Language: English
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spelling my.unimas.ir.295562023-03-29T02:27:34Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/29556/ Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator Carlina Natalia, Singiau Nur Fatihah, Abdullah Bandar Rekaya, Vincent Balang Zaiton, Hassan Dayang Kartini, Abang Ibrahim Rusli, Ahmad Hana, Hamidi H Social Sciences (General) The issue of managing the balance between the context of work and life among nurses is an evident fact in Malaysia, which potentially was due to the job nature of nurses and one’s own personal commitments. Boundary management is a method in which people use to address their work-life balance condition leading to better wellbeing. Furthermore, family supportive supervisor behavior pose to be a moderator in which helps to support nurses in successfully manging their boundaries. Deriving from the intention to obtain a more concrete finding on whether supportive supervisor behaviour can help nurses attain better boundary management, the aim of the study focuses on examining the moderating effect of family-supportive supervisor behavior on the relationship between work-nonwork boundary management preferences and well-being among nurses. Questionnaires were administered to registered nurses in a private hospital in Kuching, Sarawak with 67 responses collected and the data was being analysed using IBM SPSS 25. Results revealed there is no significant relationship between work-nonwork boundary preferences and well-being. Family-supportive supervisor behavior was positively related to well-being among nurses. The result revealed that family-supportive supervisor behavior moderates the relationship between work-nonwork boundary management preferences and well-being among nurses. Based on our findings, family-supportive supervision is a plausible boundary condition for the relationship between work-nonwork boundary preferences and well-being. This study suggests that, family-supportive supervision is a trainable resource that organizations should facilitate to improve employee well-being in healthcare settings. Hampstead Psychological Associates 2020 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/29556/1/Carlina%20Natalia%20%20Singiau.pdf Carlina Natalia, Singiau and Nur Fatihah, Abdullah Bandar and Rekaya, Vincent Balang and Zaiton, Hassan and Dayang Kartini, Abang Ibrahim and Rusli, Ahmad and Hana, Hamidi (2020) Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator. International Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation, 24 (08). pp. 1513-1518. ISSN 1475-7192 https://www.psychosocial.com/ DOI: 10.37200/IJPR/V24I8/PR280163
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic H Social Sciences (General)
spellingShingle H Social Sciences (General)
Carlina Natalia, Singiau
Nur Fatihah, Abdullah Bandar
Rekaya, Vincent Balang
Zaiton, Hassan
Dayang Kartini, Abang Ibrahim
Rusli, Ahmad
Hana, Hamidi
Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator
description The issue of managing the balance between the context of work and life among nurses is an evident fact in Malaysia, which potentially was due to the job nature of nurses and one’s own personal commitments. Boundary management is a method in which people use to address their work-life balance condition leading to better wellbeing. Furthermore, family supportive supervisor behavior pose to be a moderator in which helps to support nurses in successfully manging their boundaries. Deriving from the intention to obtain a more concrete finding on whether supportive supervisor behaviour can help nurses attain better boundary management, the aim of the study focuses on examining the moderating effect of family-supportive supervisor behavior on the relationship between work-nonwork boundary management preferences and well-being among nurses. Questionnaires were administered to registered nurses in a private hospital in Kuching, Sarawak with 67 responses collected and the data was being analysed using IBM SPSS 25. Results revealed there is no significant relationship between work-nonwork boundary preferences and well-being. Family-supportive supervisor behavior was positively related to well-being among nurses. The result revealed that family-supportive supervisor behavior moderates the relationship between work-nonwork boundary management preferences and well-being among nurses. Based on our findings, family-supportive supervision is a plausible boundary condition for the relationship between work-nonwork boundary preferences and well-being. This study suggests that, family-supportive supervision is a trainable resource that organizations should facilitate to improve employee well-being in healthcare settings.
format Article
author Carlina Natalia, Singiau
Nur Fatihah, Abdullah Bandar
Rekaya, Vincent Balang
Zaiton, Hassan
Dayang Kartini, Abang Ibrahim
Rusli, Ahmad
Hana, Hamidi
author_facet Carlina Natalia, Singiau
Nur Fatihah, Abdullah Bandar
Rekaya, Vincent Balang
Zaiton, Hassan
Dayang Kartini, Abang Ibrahim
Rusli, Ahmad
Hana, Hamidi
author_sort Carlina Natalia, Singiau
title Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator
title_short Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator
title_full Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator
title_fullStr Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator
title_full_unstemmed Work -Nonwork Boundary Management Preferences and Well - Being Among Nurses : Family-Supportive Supervisor Behavior as a Moderator
title_sort work -nonwork boundary management preferences and well - being among nurses : family-supportive supervisor behavior as a moderator
publisher Hampstead Psychological Associates
publishDate 2020
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/29556/1/Carlina%20Natalia%20%20Singiau.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/29556/
https://www.psychosocial.com/
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