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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Identifying long-term patterns of work-related rumination: Associations with job demands and well-being outcomes
Ulla KinnunenTaru FeldtKalevi M. KorpelaSabine A. E. GeurtsMarjaana SianojaJessica De Bloomsubject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementLongitudinal studyPerseverative cognitiontyöhyvinvointipalautuminenhyvinvointi050109 social psychologydetachment from workWork relatedtyöunettomuusuupumus0502 economics and businessmedicinenukkuminen0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesApplied Psychologyta515unihäiriötWork Health and PerformanceWork engagement05 social sciencesruminationCognitionsitoutuminenstressiorganisaatiopsykologiaTerm (time)psyykkinen kuormittavuusRuminationWell-beingmedicine.symptomPsychology050203 business & managementClinical psychologydescription
Item does not contain fulltext The aim of this 2-year longitudinal study was to identify long-term patterns of work-related rumination in terms of affective rumination, problem-solving pondering, and lack of psychological detachment from work during off-job time. We also examined how the patterns differed in job demands and well-being outcomes. The data were collected via questionnaires in three waves among employees (N = 664). Through latent profile analysis (LPA), five stable long-term patterns of rumination were identified: (1) no rumination (n = 81), (2) moderate detachment from work (n = 228), (3) moderate rumination combined with low detachment (n = 216), (4) affective rumination (n = 54), and (5) problem-solving pondering (n = 85), both combined with low detachment. The patterns differed in the job demands and well-being outcomes examined. Job demands (time pressure, cognitive and emotional demands) were at the highest level across time in patterns 3-5 and lowest in pattern 1. Patterns 3 and 4 were associated with poorer well-being outcomes (higher job exhaustion and more sleeping problems, and lower work engagement) across time. By contrast, pattern 5 showed positive outcomes, especially high level of work engagement. Thus, the different patterns of work-related ruminative thoughts suggest diverse relationships with job demands and well-being. 18 p.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-04-18 | European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology |