# TRUST IN THE ORGANIZATION AS A MEDIATOR IN THE RELATIONSHIP OF GOOD ORGANIZATIONAL CONTEXT WITH EMPLOYEE WELL-BEING

**Authors:** Agnieszka Czerw, Damian Grabowski, Agata Chudzicka-Czupała, Katarzyna Stąpor

PMC · DOI: 10.13075/ijomeh.1896.02615 · 2025-07-01

## TL;DR

This study shows that trust in the organization fully mediates how a good work environment affects employee well-being, job satisfaction, and stress.

## Contribution

The study identifies full organizational trust as a complete mediator between organizational context and employee well-being.

## Key findings

- A well-functioning organization explains 90% of the variance in full organizational trust.
- Full organizational trust explains 87% of the variance in workplace well-being.
- Trust in the organization and supervisors plays a key role in enhancing well-being and reducing stress.

## Abstract

This study examined whether trust in supervisor, co-workers, and the organization mediates the relationship between organizational context and employee well-being. The research aimed to identify which components of trust have the strongest mediating effect, which organizational context elements are most strongly related to trust, and which dimensions of well-being are best explained by this model.

The study involved 1113 employees from various Polish organizations, averaging 45 years of age, with 41% having higher education. Participants completed questionnaires measuring areas of worklife, authentic leadership, trust propensity, trust in supervisors, trust in co-workers, trust in organization, workplace well-being, job satisfaction, and work stress. Structural equation modeling was used to analyze relationships between 3 latent variables: well-functioning organization (WFO), full trust in the organization (FTO), and well-being in the workplace (WB).

The best-fitting model showed that full trust in the organization completely mediates the relationship between a WFO and WB. The WFO explained 90% of the variance in FTO. The WFO most strongly explained trust in the organization as a whole (81%) and trust in supervisors (68%), with weaker explanation of trust in coworkers (37%). The FTO explained 87% of the variance in WB, which in turn was strongly associated with job satisfaction (70% of variance) and negatively with work stress (34% of variance).

A well-functioning organization characterized by value congruence, fair rewards, recognition, authentic leadership, and supportive peer groups strongly influences full organizational trust, which in turn enhances well-being and job satisfaction while reducing work stress. Trust serves as a complete mediator between organizational context and employee well-being, with trust in the organization and in supervisors playing particularly important roles in this relationship.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12645381/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12645381