The Interaction of
Job Stress and Social Support:
A Strong Inference Investigation^
ANSON SEERS
GAIL W. McGEE
University of Alabama
TIMOTHY T. SEREY
Northern Kentucky University
GEORGE B. GRAEN
University of Cincinnati
A comparative examination was made of three alternative hypotheses (buffer, coping, no interaction) predicting job outcomes by job stress and social support. For
role ambiguity, little evidence of interaction effects was
found. For role conflict, supportive evidence was found
for the coping hypothesis, but not the buffer hypothesis,
on the work and supervisory satisfaction facets.
Job stress, and its relationship to both individual and organizational outcomes, has become an increasingly important area of study in recent years.
Role characteristics, specifically role conflict and role ambiguity, have been
cited frequently as sources of job-related stress and have been found to
be related to numerous negative attitudinal and behavioral outcomes (Brief
& Aldag, 1976; Szilagyi, Sims, & Keller, 1976). Because of the generally
adverse personal and organizational outcomes of role conflict and role ambiguity, and the concurrent difficulty of eliminating these stressors from
organizations, increased attention has been given to the exploration of variables that might moderate the role stress-role strain relationship, thus reducing negative health and job outcomes. One such variable that has stimulated increasing interest among organizational researchers is that of social
support (Beehr, 1976; Blau, 1981; LaRocco & Jones, 1978; LaRocco, House,
& French, 1980).
Interest in on-the-job stress was stimulated by research funded by the
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (Caplan, Cobb,
French, Van Harrison, & Pinneau, 1975). These researchers, working at
'This study ^yas funded by U.S. Army Research Institute Grant, #DAHC 19-786-0012, George Graen,
principal investigator.
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and (4) using multiple alternative hypotheses (Platt, 1964). Three plausible alternative hypotheses can be stated, based on the literature reviewed:
7. The simultaneous effects of stress and support on job satisfaction are simply additive (no interactions).
2. Stress and support interact such that:
a. Stress will be negatively related to satisfaction for those with
low social support, but unrelated for those with high social
support (the buffer hypothesis).
b. Support will be positively related to satisfaction for those reporting high stress, but unrelated for those reporting low stress
(the coping hypothesis).
The difference between the buffer hypothesis and the coping hypothesis
is simply the pattern of the interaction predicted. The preferred method
of testing the statistical significance of interactions, hierarchical regression
analysis (Cohen & Cohen, 1975), reflects no distinction between patterns
of interaction. Either of these two particular patterns, as well as patterns
involving both positive and negative associations, could be found to represent the complex association of three variables. It also should be noted that
none of the hypotheses involves causal attribution or time ordering of the
variables.
Method
Setting and Sample
The research site was a large federal government agency. The organization processes information specific to clients on forms originating from
both the clients and other branches of the agency. The branch of the organization used in this study was composed of nine work units ranging in
size from 12 to 20 workers. With the exception of a clerical support unit
and individual unit clerks, all workers shared the same job title and job
description. The branch manager, the nine unit managers, and all employees
classified by the job title of clerk were excluded from the sample, yielding
a sample of 104 respondents.
The respondents were predominantly female and typically had a high
school education. Ages ranged from early twenties to the sixties. The racial
composition was mixed, with somewhat more Caucasians than Blacks.
Procedure
Data collection was conducted on site, during working hours. Respondents
completed questionnaire measures in a large room away from the work area.
Participation was voluntary, confidentiality of the study was stressed, and
fewer than five employees failed to provide usable data.
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Measures
Social support was measured with the instrument developed by ISR (Pinneau, 1975). Four items assess the extent to which others make worklife
easier, are easy to talk to, will help when things get tough, and are willing
to listen to personal problems. Each of the four items was asked in reference
to each of four possible sources: the branch manager, the unit manager,
co-workers, and family friends. The four items were summed for each
source, yielding scales with internal consistencies (Cronbach's alpha) of,
respectively, a = .91, .79, .53, and .76. The reliability estimate of co-worker
support, although notably lower than the estimates for the other sources,
was not taken to be problematic. Nunnally's (1967) recommendation for
standards of reliability in early stages of research on hypothesized measures
of a construct is that modest reliabilities of a = .50 to a = .60 will suffice.
Only two published papers have used this measure, and both report its reliability as being above a = .72. It may be that the differences are due to
sampling error.
Role ambiguity and role confiict were assessed with scales developed by
Kahn, Wolfe, Quinn, Snoek, and Rosenthal (1964). The role ambiguity
scale consisted of four items and had internal consistency of a = .80. The
role confiict scale consisted of three items and had reliability of a = .78.
Job satisfaction facets were measured with the Role Orientation Index
(Graen, Dansereau, & Minami, 1972), which is an adaptation of the Job
Descriptive Index (Smith, Kendall, & Hulin, 1969). The four facets measured
were satisfaction with work, supervision, pay, and promotions. Internal
consistencies were, respectively, a = .79, .83, .81, and .86. Overall job satisfaction was assessed with Hoppock's (1935) general satisfaction scale. Its
reliability was a = .78.
Analyses
The means, standard deviations, and intercorrelations of all the scales
were computed. Moderated multiple regression (Zedeck, 1971) was used
to test the main effects and interactions of social support sources with role
stress on job satisfaction outcomes. Separate analyses were done on the
two role stress variables, role ambiguity and role conflict. In this procedure,
hierarchical regression is used initially to assess the relation of one of the
role stress variables to one of the satisfaction variables. Second, one of
the social support source variables is forced to enter the regression equation as the second predictor. Finally, the multiplicative interaction term
(stress X support) is forced to enter the regression equation as the third variable.
The test of the incremental variance accounted as attributable to the multiplicative interaction term is the critical statistical test for the stated hypotheses. If Hypothesis 1, no interaction, could be ruled out, visual examination
of the pattern of the interaction was used to assess whether it fit Hypothesis
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Figure 1
Regressions of Satisfaction on Support within Stress Subgroups
High
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High Role
Conflict
Low Role
Conflict
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Discussion
The investigation of explicit social support showed the importance of
differentiating between the four sources. None of the previously cited studies
examined social support from managers above the immediate supervisor.
In this study, however, as many interaction effects with stress were found
for branch manager support as for the other three sources combined. Thus,
previous research may have ignored an important resource that may be
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enlisted for coping with occupational stress. For unit manager support, the
evidence supported direct effects more than interaction effects. Specifically, in both the confiict and the ambiguity analysis, unit manager support
was directly and strongly related to supervisory satisfaction, but not to other
facets. These two direct effects were far stronger than any other relationships found in this study. Co-worker support showed the same pattern of
direct and interaction effects on supervisory satisfaction as did unit manager
support, but the magnitude of co-worker direct effects was no greater than
the size of its lone interaction effect. The final source used in this study,
support from family and friends, appeared to be indistinct from co-worker
support considering the zero-order intercorrelation and coincidental interaction effects. However, a clear pattern distinguishing these two sources arose
from the regression analysis. For both ambiguity and confiict, family and
friend support was directly related to overall satisfaction; co-worker support was not. Co-worker support showed consistently stronger, although
modest, relationships to the work and supervision satisfaction facets than
did family and friend support. Because the four sources showed different
patterns of direct and moderating effects, some of the inconsistent results
from previous studies may have been due to lack of specificity in differentiating between sources of support.
The pattern of findings in the comparison of direct and moderating effects of social support also speaks to the inconsistency of previous research.
Interaction effects were nearly as common as direct effects in this study.
However, all but one of the interaction effects were found in the role confiict analysis, and an equal number of direct effects was found in the role
confiict and role ambiguity analyses. If social support is more likely to play
an interactive role in confiict-outcome relationships than ambiguity-outcome
relationships, then the inconsistent finding of interaction effects in some
previous studies is more easily explainable. LaRocco and Jones (1978), for
example, used a composite role stress variable including items assessing both
confiict and ambiguity. Beehr (1976) tested for moderating effects on role
ambiguity only. He did not examine confiict. Because role confiict depends
on discrepancies arising in role relations and because ambiguity may be
inherent in the task itself, it may be that personally supportive interaction
has greater impact on stress due to confiict than on stress due to ambiguity.
Just as the explicit specification of both the source of support and the
type of role stress ordered the finding of interaction effects in these data,
so did the specification of facets of job satisfaction. Supervisory satisfaction was the outcome for which most of the significant interactions were
found. Four interaction effects were found for this facet of satisfaction;
two were found for the work satisfaction facet. No significant interaction
effects were found for overall satisfaction, pay satisfaction, or promotion
satisfaction. The concentration of interaction effects on these two specific
facets of the job, satisfaction with the supervisor and with the work itself,
is easily explainable. It is precisely these aspects of jobs that involve the
personal interaction of individuals in role relations. Again, the failure of
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previous research to find consistent interaction effects on general job satisfaction may have led researchers to conclude falsely that stress and support do not interact.
The LaRocco et al. (1980) study is notable in this respect. Their three
job outcome measures were job dissatisfaction, boredom, and workload
dissatisfaction. Only workload dissatisfaction is conceptually close to satisfaction with the work itself as a specific facet of job satisfaction. The
LaRocco et al. study found significant interactions on workload dissatisfaction for both social support from co-workers and social support from
family and friends with role confiict as the stress variable. However, these
authors summarized their results across five stress variables, three support
sources, and three outcome measures. With 45 tests taken as a pool, their
conclusion was that the proportion of significant interactions is not clear-
ly more than would occur by chance. A review of the results of the LaRocco
et al. study in conjunction with the present study indicates that a meaningful concentration of interaction effects occurs with role confiict and specific satisfaction facets. This concentration supports the conclusion that
the evidence against interaction effects may be taken as unequivocal for
general job satisfaction but not for the facets of work and supervision, and
for role ambiguity but not for role confiict.
The nature of the significant interaction effects indicates the inadequacy
of the buffer hypothesis. The coping hypothesis is much more consistent
with the interactions observed. Further, the coping hypothesis as an explanation of stress x support interactions is more consistent with the notion
that supportive relationships provide a strategy for dealing with job stress.
Social support may be of lesser concern to individuals not experiencing a
significant amount of stress. For such individuals job satisfaction may be
more a function of other characteristics of work.
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A nson Seers is Assistant Professor of Organizational Behavior
at the University of Alabama.
Gail W. McGee is a doctoral student in Organizational Behavior
at the University of Alabama.
Timothy T. Serey is Assistant Professor of Organizational Behavior at Northern Kentucky University.
George B. Graen is Professor of Organizational Behavior and
Director of the Center for Strategic Management Studies, College of Business Administration at the University of Cincinnati.