Toxin Handler Behaviour: An Initial Assessment of a New Measure

Pain pervades the workplace in many forms. Events that occur in people's lives in and outside of work affect how they feel and how they perform their job. Difficult situations disturb people's emotional states. In addition to this, many people are exposed to toxic situations at work. The c...

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Main Authors: Martens, M.L, Gagne, M, BROWN, Graham
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2010
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2789
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-37882010-09-24T09:24:03Z Toxin Handler Behaviour: An Initial Assessment of a New Measure Martens, M.L Gagne, M BROWN, Graham Pain pervades the workplace in many forms. Events that occur in people's lives in and outside of work affect how they feel and how they perform their job. Difficult situations disturb people's emotional states. In addition to this, many people are exposed to toxic situations at work. The cause can come from many different sources, some intended and some not. Yet, organizations generally function and operate in a relatively undisrupted manner despite these potentially toxic situations. But how do people in organizations process and manage the stress, anxieties, and pain that exist in daily work life. How do organizations continue to function in spite of these difficulties? Researchers recently asked these questions and recognize that workplaces function because they contain compassionate people. A promising new concept suggested by Peter Frost examines both the pain and the compassion found in organizations. He coined the term toxin handler to describe a boundary spanning extra-role behaviour where employees help their coworkers deal with pain. These toxin handlers help their colleagues deal with pain caused by others in the organization, yet are also of great support and strength when the pain is external and affecting how the employee feels and performs on their job. Because this is a new concept, little is known about the underlying dimensions of handling toxins and what specific types of helping behaviours exist. In this article we describe the initial results of an empirical stream of research focusing on toxin handler behaviours and toxin handlers. 2010-03-20T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2789 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Business
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Business
spellingShingle Business
Martens, M.L
Gagne, M
BROWN, Graham
Toxin Handler Behaviour: An Initial Assessment of a New Measure
description Pain pervades the workplace in many forms. Events that occur in people's lives in and outside of work affect how they feel and how they perform their job. Difficult situations disturb people's emotional states. In addition to this, many people are exposed to toxic situations at work. The cause can come from many different sources, some intended and some not. Yet, organizations generally function and operate in a relatively undisrupted manner despite these potentially toxic situations. But how do people in organizations process and manage the stress, anxieties, and pain that exist in daily work life. How do organizations continue to function in spite of these difficulties? Researchers recently asked these questions and recognize that workplaces function because they contain compassionate people. A promising new concept suggested by Peter Frost examines both the pain and the compassion found in organizations. He coined the term toxin handler to describe a boundary spanning extra-role behaviour where employees help their coworkers deal with pain. These toxin handlers help their colleagues deal with pain caused by others in the organization, yet are also of great support and strength when the pain is external and affecting how the employee feels and performs on their job. Because this is a new concept, little is known about the underlying dimensions of handling toxins and what specific types of helping behaviours exist. In this article we describe the initial results of an empirical stream of research focusing on toxin handler behaviours and toxin handlers.
format text
author Martens, M.L
Gagne, M
BROWN, Graham
author_facet Martens, M.L
Gagne, M
BROWN, Graham
author_sort Martens, M.L
title Toxin Handler Behaviour: An Initial Assessment of a New Measure
title_short Toxin Handler Behaviour: An Initial Assessment of a New Measure
title_full Toxin Handler Behaviour: An Initial Assessment of a New Measure
title_fullStr Toxin Handler Behaviour: An Initial Assessment of a New Measure
title_full_unstemmed Toxin Handler Behaviour: An Initial Assessment of a New Measure
title_sort toxin handler behaviour: an initial assessment of a new measure
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2010
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2789
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