Systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this review was to assess systematically the empirical evidence for associations between employee worktime control (WTC) and work–non-work balance, health/well-being, and job-related outcomes (eg, job satisfaction, job performance). METHOD: A systematic search of empirical stu...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH)
2012-07-01
|
Series: | Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: |
https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3307
|
id |
doaj-93ea8735855b46fd87f7b14d3133d51f |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-93ea8735855b46fd87f7b14d3133d51f2021-04-22T09:20:44ZengNordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH)Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health0355-31401795-990X2012-07-0138429931310.5271/sjweh.33073307Systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomesHylco H Nijp0Debby GJ BeckersSabine AE GeurtsPhilip TuckerMichiel AJ KompierBehavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, PO Box 9104, 6500 HE, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.OBJECTIVES: The aim of this review was to assess systematically the empirical evidence for associations between employee worktime control (WTC) and work–non-work balance, health/well-being, and job-related outcomes (eg, job satisfaction, job performance). METHOD: A systematic search of empirical studies published between 1995–2011 resulted in 63 relevant papers from 53 studies. Five different categories of WTC measurements were distinguished (global WTC, multidimensional WTC, flextime, leave control, and “other subdimensions of WTC”). For each WTC category, we examined the strength of evidence for an association with (i) work–non-work balance, (ii) health/well-being, and (iii) job-related outcomes. We distinguished between cross-sectional, longitudinal, and intervention studies. Evidence strength was assessed based on the number of studies and their convergence in terms of study findings. RESULTS: (Moderately) strong cross-sectional evidence was found for positive associations between global WTC and both work–non-work balance and job-related outcomes, whereas no consistent evidence was found regarding health/well-being. Intervention studies on global WTC found moderately strong evidence for a positive causal association with work–non-work balance and no or insufficient evidence for health/well-being and job-related outcomes. Limited to moderately strong cross-sectional evidence was found for positive associations between multidimensional WTC and our outcome categories. Moderately strong cross-sectional evidence was found for positive associations between flextime and all outcome categories. The lack of intervention or longitudinal studies restricts clear causal inferences. CONCLUSIONS: This review has shown that there are theoretical and empirical reasons to view WTC as a promising tool for the maintenance of employees’ work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes. At the same time, however, the current state of evidence allows only very limited causal inferences to be made regarding the impact of enhanced WTC. https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3307 stresshealthwell-beingsystematic reviewwork–family conflictwork schedulingworktime controlwork–non-work balancejob-related outcomeworktime flexibilityjob motivationjob performance |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Hylco H Nijp Debby GJ Beckers Sabine AE Geurts Philip Tucker Michiel AJ Kompier |
spellingShingle |
Hylco H Nijp Debby GJ Beckers Sabine AE Geurts Philip Tucker Michiel AJ Kompier Systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health stress health well-being systematic review work–family conflict work scheduling worktime control work–non-work balance job-related outcome worktime flexibility job motivation job performance |
author_facet |
Hylco H Nijp Debby GJ Beckers Sabine AE Geurts Philip Tucker Michiel AJ Kompier |
author_sort |
Hylco H Nijp |
title |
Systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes |
title_short |
Systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes |
title_full |
Systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes |
title_fullStr |
Systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes |
title_full_unstemmed |
Systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes |
title_sort |
systematic review on the association between employee worktime control and work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes |
publisher |
Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH) |
series |
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health |
issn |
0355-3140 1795-990X |
publishDate |
2012-07-01 |
description |
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this review was to assess systematically the empirical evidence for associations between employee worktime control (WTC) and work–non-work balance, health/well-being, and job-related outcomes (eg, job satisfaction, job performance). METHOD: A systematic search of empirical studies published between 1995–2011 resulted in 63 relevant papers from 53 studies. Five different categories of WTC measurements were distinguished (global WTC, multidimensional WTC, flextime, leave control, and “other subdimensions of WTC”). For each WTC category, we examined the strength of evidence for an association with (i) work–non-work balance, (ii) health/well-being, and (iii) job-related outcomes. We distinguished between cross-sectional, longitudinal, and intervention studies. Evidence strength was assessed based on the number of studies and their convergence in terms of study findings. RESULTS: (Moderately) strong cross-sectional evidence was found for positive associations between global WTC and both work–non-work balance and job-related outcomes, whereas no consistent evidence was found regarding health/well-being. Intervention studies on global WTC found moderately strong evidence for a positive causal association with work–non-work balance and no or insufficient evidence for health/well-being and job-related outcomes. Limited to moderately strong cross-sectional evidence was found for positive associations between multidimensional WTC and our outcome categories. Moderately strong cross-sectional evidence was found for positive associations between flextime and all outcome categories. The lack of intervention or longitudinal studies restricts clear causal inferences. CONCLUSIONS: This review has shown that there are theoretical and empirical reasons to view WTC as a promising tool for the maintenance of employees’ work–non-work balance, health and well-being, and job-related outcomes. At the same time, however, the current state of evidence allows only very limited causal inferences to be made regarding the impact of enhanced WTC. |
topic |
stress health well-being systematic review work–family conflict work scheduling worktime control work–non-work balance job-related outcome worktime flexibility job motivation job performance |
url |
https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3307
|
work_keys_str_mv |
AT hylcohnijp systematicreviewontheassociationbetweenemployeeworktimecontrolandworknonworkbalancehealthandwellbeingandjobrelatedoutcomes AT debbygjbeckers systematicreviewontheassociationbetweenemployeeworktimecontrolandworknonworkbalancehealthandwellbeingandjobrelatedoutcomes AT sabineaegeurts systematicreviewontheassociationbetweenemployeeworktimecontrolandworknonworkbalancehealthandwellbeingandjobrelatedoutcomes AT philiptucker systematicreviewontheassociationbetweenemployeeworktimecontrolandworknonworkbalancehealthandwellbeingandjobrelatedoutcomes AT michielajkompier systematicreviewontheassociationbetweenemployeeworktimecontrolandworknonworkbalancehealthandwellbeingandjobrelatedoutcomes |
_version_ |
1721514692712595456 |