Management of employee wellness in South Africa: Employer, service provider and union perspectives

Orientation: This article focuses on how South African organisations manage their employees’ wellness through their Employee Wellness Programmes (EWPs). Research purpose: The objective of this research is to describe employee wellness in South Africa by investigating the types, foci and perceived...

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Main Authors: Charlotte Sieberhagen, Jaco Pienaar, Crizelle Els
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2011-06-01
Series:South African Journal of Human Resource Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/305
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spelling doaj-79ae0b8644e64d4e94f931fb47fd38582020-11-24T22:17:05ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Human Resource Management1683-75842071-078X2011-06-0191e1e1410.4102/sajhrm.v9i1.305197Management of employee wellness in South Africa: Employer, service provider and union perspectivesCharlotte Sieberhagen0Jaco Pienaar1Crizelle Els2WorkWell: Research Unit for Economic and Management Sciences, North-West University, PotchefstroomWorkWell: Research Unit for Economic and Management Sciences, North-West University, PotchefstroomWorkWell: Research Unit for Economic and Management Sciences, North-West University, PotchefstroomOrientation: This article focuses on how South African organisations manage their employees’ wellness through their Employee Wellness Programmes (EWPs). Research purpose: The objective of this research is to describe employee wellness in South Africa by investigating the types, foci and perceived success of EWPs. Motivation for the study: Despite the growing awareness of the importance of EWPs in South Africa, the nature, content, context, participants, role-players and anticipated benefits as well as the possible drawbacks of these programmes in the South African context are unclear. Research design, approach and method: The researchers used a cross-sectional design. The first author developed the Employee Wellness Survey, consisting of quantitative and qualitative questions, to collect data from 16 organisations, four service providers and seven labour unions in South Africa. Main findings: The results showed that organisations, service providers and labour unions define employee wellness differently and that these role players give different reasons for introducing EWPs. Almost half of the participating organisations have no baseline measurement with which to compare the effectiveness of their EWPs. Generally, all the organisations present the results of their programmes reasonably. However, the programmes involve little overall expenditure to the organisations. Practical/managerial implications: Organisations should monitor the state of their employees’ wellness in order to manage it effectively. This will only become possible when information about employee wellness improves. Contribution/value-add: This study provides new information about the nature, content, context, participants, role-players, anticipated benefits and possible drawbacks of EWPs in the South-African context.https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/305employee wellness programmesinterventionlabour unionsorganisationsservice providerswell-beingwellness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charlotte Sieberhagen
Jaco Pienaar
Crizelle Els
spellingShingle Charlotte Sieberhagen
Jaco Pienaar
Crizelle Els
Management of employee wellness in South Africa: Employer, service provider and union perspectives
South African Journal of Human Resource Management
employee wellness programmes
intervention
labour unions
organisations
service providers
well-being
wellness
author_facet Charlotte Sieberhagen
Jaco Pienaar
Crizelle Els
author_sort Charlotte Sieberhagen
title Management of employee wellness in South Africa: Employer, service provider and union perspectives
title_short Management of employee wellness in South Africa: Employer, service provider and union perspectives
title_full Management of employee wellness in South Africa: Employer, service provider and union perspectives
title_fullStr Management of employee wellness in South Africa: Employer, service provider and union perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Management of employee wellness in South Africa: Employer, service provider and union perspectives
title_sort management of employee wellness in south africa: employer, service provider and union perspectives
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Human Resource Management
issn 1683-7584
2071-078X
publishDate 2011-06-01
description Orientation: This article focuses on how South African organisations manage their employees’ wellness through their Employee Wellness Programmes (EWPs). Research purpose: The objective of this research is to describe employee wellness in South Africa by investigating the types, foci and perceived success of EWPs. Motivation for the study: Despite the growing awareness of the importance of EWPs in South Africa, the nature, content, context, participants, role-players and anticipated benefits as well as the possible drawbacks of these programmes in the South African context are unclear. Research design, approach and method: The researchers used a cross-sectional design. The first author developed the Employee Wellness Survey, consisting of quantitative and qualitative questions, to collect data from 16 organisations, four service providers and seven labour unions in South Africa. Main findings: The results showed that organisations, service providers and labour unions define employee wellness differently and that these role players give different reasons for introducing EWPs. Almost half of the participating organisations have no baseline measurement with which to compare the effectiveness of their EWPs. Generally, all the organisations present the results of their programmes reasonably. However, the programmes involve little overall expenditure to the organisations. Practical/managerial implications: Organisations should monitor the state of their employees’ wellness in order to manage it effectively. This will only become possible when information about employee wellness improves. Contribution/value-add: This study provides new information about the nature, content, context, participants, role-players, anticipated benefits and possible drawbacks of EWPs in the South-African context.
topic employee wellness programmes
intervention
labour unions
organisations
service providers
well-being
wellness
url https://sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/305
work_keys_str_mv AT charlottesieberhagen managementofemployeewellnessinsouthafricaemployerserviceproviderandunionperspectives
AT jacopienaar managementofemployeewellnessinsouthafricaemployerserviceproviderandunionperspectives
AT crizelleels managementofemployeewellnessinsouthafricaemployerserviceproviderandunionperspectives
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