Search results for "Job control"

showing 10 items of 29 documents

Work–family conflict and enrichment from the perspective of psychosocial resources: Comparing Finnish healthcare workers by working schedules

2014

Abstract We examined work–family conflict (WFC) and work–family enrichment (WFE) by comparing Finnish nurses, working dayshifts (non-shiftworkers, n = 874) and non-dayshifts. The non-dayshift employees worked either two different dayshifts (2-shiftworkers, n = 490) or three different shifts including nightshifts (3-shiftworkers, n = 270). Specifically, we investigated whether different resources, i.e. job control, managers' work–family support, co-workers' work–family support, control at home, personal coping strategies, and schedule satisfaction, predicted differently WFC and WFE in these three groups. Results showed that lower managers' work–family support predicted higher WFC only among …

AdultEmploymentMaleScheduleTime FactorsHealth PersonnelJob controlWork–family conflictPersonnel Staffing and SchedulingPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationHuman Factors and ErgonomicsJob SatisfactionConflict PsychologicalSurveys and QuestionnairesWork Schedule ToleranceHealth careHumansPsychologyFamilyfamily conflictSafety Risk Reliability and QualityEngineering (miscellaneous)ta515FinlandWork–family enrichmentbusiness.industryPerspective (graphical)shiftworkta3142Femalefamily enrichmentPsychologybusinessSocial psychologyPsychosocialApplied Ergonomics
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The benefits of sustained leisure-time physical activity on job strain

2010

Background The long-term effects of leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) on job strain have not been assessed in a large prospective population-based cohort study. Aims To examine the relationship between the LTPA and the prevalence of job strain. Methods The participants were 861 full-time employees (406 men and 455 women), aged 24―39 years in 2001, from the ongoing Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study. LTPA was assessed using a self-report questionnaire in 1992 and in 2001. The participants were grouped into four categories according to tertiles of LTPA index at two time points: persistently active, increasingly active, decreasingly active and persistently inactive. Job strain was me…

AdultMaleGerontologyAdolescentOccupational prestigeJob controlPopulationPhysical exerciseYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesLeisure Activities0302 clinical medicinePrevalenceHumansMedicineProspective Studies030212 general & internal medicineSex DistributionYoung adulteducationExerciseFinlandeducation.field_of_studyJob strainbusiness.industryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Health030210 environmental & occupational healthOccupational DiseasesFemaleOccupational stressbusinesshuman activitiesStress PsychologicalCohort studyOccupational Medicine
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Relationships of working conditions, health problems and vehicle accidents in bus rapid transit (BRT) drivers

2018

Background The aim of this study was to estimate accident risk rates and mental health of bus rapid transit (BRT) drivers based on psychosocial risk factors at work leading to increased stress and health problems. Methods A cross-sectional research design utilized a self-report questionnaire completed by 524 BRT drivers. Results Some working conditions of BRT drivers (lack of social support from supervisors and perceived potential for risk) may partially explain Bogota's BRT drivers' involvement in road accidents. Drivers' mental health problems were associated with higher job strain, less support from co-workers, fewer rewards and greater signal conflict while driving. Conclusions To preve…

AdultMaleRiskCondiciones de trabajoBRT driversJob controlApplied psychologyPsychological interventionTransportationColombiaOccupational safety and healthOccupational StressSocial supportJob stressSurveys and Questionnaires0502 economics and businessHumansMedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050107 human factorsBus rapid transit050210 logistics & transportationOccupational healthJob strainbusiness.industry05 social sciencesAccidents TrafficPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSocial SupportMiddle AgedMental healthMotor VehiclesCross-Sectional StudiesMental HealthMental healthFemaleEnfermedades cardiovascularesbusinessRisk assessmentEstrés laboralhuman activitiesAmerican Journal of Industrial Medicine
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How personal resources predict work engagement and self-rated performance among construction workers: A social cognitive perspective

2014

Traditionally, research focussing on psychosocial factors in the construction industry has focused mainly on the negative aspects of health and on results such as occupational accidents. This study, however, focuses on the specific relationships among the different positive psychosocial factors shared by construction workers that could be responsible for occupational well-being and outcomes such as performance. The main objective of this study was to test whether personal resources predict self-rated job performance through job resources and work engagement. Following the predictions of Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory and the motivational process of the Job Demands-Resources Model, we exp…

Contextual performanceJob shadowArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Job performanceJob controlJob analysisJob designJob attitudeJob satisfactionGeneral MedicinePsychologySocial psychologyGeneral PsychologyInternational Journal of Psychology
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Does job design make workers happy?

2019

Using linked employer‐employee data for Finland we examine associations between job design, employee well‐being and job‐related stress. Three key findings stand out. First, in accordance with the theory of Karasek and Karasek and Theorell, job control and supervisory support are positively correlated with employee well‐being and negatively correlated with job‐related stress. Second, as predicted by theory, job demands are positively correlated with job‐related stress. Third, there is no association between job demands and employee well‐being and, contrary to expectations, neither job control nor supervisory support alleviate the negative relationship between job demands and job‐related stre…

Economics and EconometricsSociology and Political ScienceJob controltyöhyvinvointihyvinvointisupervisorsjob supporthenkilöstöjohtaminenstress0502 economics and businesstyöntekijätEconomics050207 economicsAssociation (psychology)worker well‐beingjob control050205 econometrics job satisfaction05 social sciencesJob designstressityön sisältötyötyytyväisyysjob demandsNegative relationshiptyön kuormittavuusJob satisfactionSocial psychologyHRMjob design
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Revealing Hidden Curvilinear Relations Between Work Engagement and Its Predictors: Demonstrating the Added Value of Generalized Additive Model (GAM)

2014

Previous studies measuring different aspects of the quality of life have, as a rule, presumed linear relationships between a dependent variable and its predictors. This article utilizes non-parametric statistical methodology to explore curvilinear relations between work engagement and its main predictors: job demands, job control and social support. Firstly, the study examines what additional information non-linear modeling can reveal regarding the relationship between work engagement and the three predictors in question. Secondly, the article compares the explanatory power of non-linear and linear modeling with regard to work engagement. The generalized additive model (GAM), that makes pos…

Generalized linear modelgeneralized additive model (GAM)Karasek’s modelCurvilinear coordinatesVariablesJob controlWork engagementmedia_common.quotation_subjecttyön imu05 social sciencesGeneralized additive modelLinear modelsosiaalinen tuki050301 educationjob demands0502 economics and businessEconometricsSurvey data collectionPsychology0503 educationSocial psychologyjob control050203 business & managementSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commonJournal of Happiness Studies
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Job demand and control in mid-life and physical and mental functioning in early old age: do childhood factors explain these associations in a British…

2014

ObjectivesAdverse work-related exposures have been linked with decreased physical and mental functioning in later life, however, whether childhood factors explain the associations between work exposures and functioning is unknown. Our aim was to investigate if job demand and control in mid-life were related to self-reported physical and mental functioning in early old age and whether childhood factors explained these associations.DesignProspective cohort study.SettingEngland, Scotland and Wales.Participants and outcome measuresData come from the UK Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development, a cohort with follow-up since birth in 1946. 1485 occupationally active stud…

GerontologyMalemedicine.medical_specialtyEpidemiologyJob controlSPORTS MEDICINEHealth StatusPoison controlWorkloadOccupational safety and healthJob SatisfactionCohort StudiesSurveys and QuestionnairesInjury preventionMedicine1724Humans1506Prospective StudiesPsychiatryProspective cohort studyOCCUPATIONAL & INDUSTRIAL MEDICINEearly old agebusiness.industry1698ResearchGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedphysical and mental functioning1692United KingdomCohortEducational StatusJob satisfactionFemale1736PUBLIC HEALTHbusiness1716Stress PsychologicalCohort studyBMJ Open
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Recovery experiences as moderators between psychosocial work characteristics and occupational well-being

2009

Abstract This study examined the direct and moderator roles of recovery experiences (psychological detachment from work, relaxation, mastery, and control) in the relationship between psychosocial work characteristics (i.e. time demands, job control, and justice of the supervisor) and occupational well-being (need for recovery, job exhaustion, and work engagement). The study was conducted among 527 Finnish employees from several occupational sectors who were employed in a variety of different jobs. Of the employees, 53% were women and the average age was 42.4 years. The moderated hierarchical regression analyses showed that psychological detachment and mastery were protective mechanisms agai…

Job controlWork engagementWell-beingBurnoutModerationPsychologyPsychosocialApplied PsychologyOccupational safety and healthOccupational burnoutClinical psychologyWork & Stress
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The Role of Personal Biological Resource in the Job Demands-Control-Support Model: Evidence From Stress Reactivity.

2021

Job resources can buffer the deleterious effect of adverse work environments. Extant studies on the interaction pattern between job resources and adverse environments were confined to the diathesis stress model. This traditional perspective has received the challenge from the differential susceptibility model and the vantage sensitivity model. Additionally, stress reactivity may be one of the important job resources at the personal biological level, but its moderating role was short of empirical research. This study aimed to examine how stress reactivity interacts with work environments in predicting job burnouts among 341 Chinese hospital female nurses. This study selected job control and …

Job controlhospital nursesControl (management)hair cortisol contentstress reactivityBurnoutsocial supportjob burnoutsBF1-990Diathesis–stress modelSocial supportResource (project management)PsychologyStress reactivityPsychologyEmotional exhaustionpsychological demandsGeneral Psychologyjob controlClinical psychologyOriginal ResearchFrontiers in psychology
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Exploring work- and organization-based resources as moderators between work–family conflict, well-being, and job attitudes

2006

Abstract In modern Western life it is difficult to avoid work–family conflict. Therefore the resources that might reduce its negative outcomes on well-being and job attitudes come into focus. Our study contributes to the work–family conflict literature by exploring the indirect (moderator) and direct role of three work- and organization-related resources, i.e., job control, family supportive climate, organization-based self-esteem (OBSE), in the work-to-family conflict and well-being/job attitude relationship. Theoretically, the study tested the recently developed Job Demands–Resources (JD-R) model in the Scandinavian context. Data for the study were gathered from three differing Finnish or…

Job demands-resources modelJob performanceJob controlWork–family conflictJob designJob attitudeJob satisfactionOccupational stressPsychologySocial psychologyApplied PsychologyWork & Stress
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