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J Occup Health Psychol · Oct 2001
Claiming in the name of fairness: organizational justice and the decision to file for workplace injury compensation.
- K Roberts and K S Markel.
- School of Labor and Industrial Relations, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824, USA. robert15@msu.edu
- J Occup Health Psychol. 2001 Oct 1; 6 (4): 332-47.
AbstractThis article explored the relationship among injured workers' perceptions of workplace justice (i.e., distributive, interactional, and procedural), perceptions of employers' disability-related policies, and the decision to file a workers' compensation claim. Using a 2-wave sample of 1,077 workers with repetitive motion injuries, the authors tested a structural equation model. Results revealed that Time 1 interactional justice was negatively related to filing a claim, whereas Time 1 distributive justice was positively related to perceptions of employer disability-related practices measured a year after the date of injury report. At Time 2, the claim decision was unrelated to perceptions of justice, yet perceptions of disability-related practices were significantly related to all 3 types of justice.
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