Transformational and Abusive Leaders and Their Influence on Employee Physical Ill-being: A Multilevel Longitudinal Study Exploring Negative Motivational-Affective Mechanisms

Publication date

2025-06-17T16:51:32Z

2025-06-17T16:51:32Z

2025-04-28

2025-06-17T16:51:32Z

Abstract

While research on leadership and employee physical ill-being is burgeoning, the short- and long-term mechanisms through which leadership influences employee physical ill-being remain underexplored. This research, grounded in leadership theories and the Job Demand-Resource (JD-R) theory, examines how transformational and abusive leadership behaviors influence employee physical ill-being through two conflictrelated negative motivational mechanisms (negative work–home interactions and job role conflict) and two negative affective mechanisms representing short-term (negative affect) and long-term (burnout) mechanisms. Employing a three-wave longitudinal design over 6 months (N = 234), our findings from a multilevel path analysis revealed that transformational and abusive leadership had respectful, negative and positive effects on employee physical ill-being via conflict-related negative motivational mechanisms and short- and long-term affective mechanisms. Notably, the influence of leadership behaviors on employee physical ill-being was more pronounced through the short-term affective mechanism (negative affect) than the long-term affective mechanism (burnout). Our findings provide a nuanced understanding of how leadership behaviors affect employee physical ill-being over time, shedding light on the dynamic interplay of motivational and affective pathways in this relationship.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Universidad Complutense de Madrid

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1017/SJP.2025.5

The Spanish Journal of Psychology, 2025, vol. 28, e12

https://doi.org/10.1017/SJP.2025.5

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Rights

cc by (c) Swanzy, Erasmus K. et al., 2025

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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