Literature DB >> 14700459

Expanding the psychosocial work environment: workplace norms and work-family conflict as correlates of stress and health.

Tove Helland Hammer1, Per Øystein Saksvik, Kjell Nytrø, Hans Torvatn, Mahmut Bayazit.   

Abstract

This study examined the contributions of organizational level norms about work requirements and social relations, and work-family conflict, to job stress and subjective health symptoms, controlling for Karasek's job demand-control-support model of the psychosocial work environment, in a sample of 1,346 employees from 56 firms in the Norwegian food and beverage industry. Hierarchical linear modeling analyses showed that organizational norms governing work performance and social relations, and work-to-family and family-to-work conflict, explained significant amounts of variance for job stress. The cross-level interaction between work performance norms and work-to-family conflict was also significantly related to job stress. Work-to-family conflict was significantly related to health symptoms, but family-to-work conflict and organizational norms were not.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 14700459     DOI: 10.1037/1076-8998.9.1.83

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Occup Health Psychol        ISSN: 1076-8998


  20 in total

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7.  IS WORK-FAMILY CONFLICT A MULTILEVEL STRESSOR LINKING JOB CONDITIONS TO MENTAL HEALTH? EVIDENCE FROM THE WORK, FAMILY AND HEALTH NETWORK.

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8.  Healthy work revisited: do changes in time strain predict well-being?

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9.  Emotional exhaustion and mental health problems among employees doing "people work": the impact of job demands, job resources and family-to-work conflict.

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10.  Work-life conflict and associations with work- and nonwork-related factors and with physical and mental health outcomes: a nationally representative cross-sectional study in Switzerland.

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