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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Effects of work–family culture on employee well-being: Exploring moderator effects in a longitudinal sample
Saija Maunosubject
Longitudinal sampleOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementLongitudinal studyWork engagementWork–family conflictWell-beingSocial environmentPsychologyConstruct (philosophy)ModerationSocial psychologyApplied PsychologyDevelopmental psychologydescription
This present panel study had three aims: (1) to shed new light on the work–family culture (WFC)–well-being (work–family conflict, work engagement, job exhaustion) linkage by investigating lagged associations between the phenomena; (2) to consider the multidimensional nature of WFC by specifying whether its lagged effects on well-being would vary by its dimensions; and (3) to explore whether the positive aspects of WFC would prevent its negative ones from spilling over into employee well-being. The study was based on a 2-year longitudinal sample (N = 409) gathered among Finnish health care workers. The results showed that WFC was a bidimensional construct containing both negative (work–family barriers) and positive (work–family support) facets. Only its positive facets (work–family support) showed a lagged negative effect on the outcomes studied (work–family conflict). No signs of moderator effects were observed.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2010-12-01 | European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology |