The Relationship of On-Call Work with Fatigue, Work-Home Interference, and Perceived Performance Difficulties

Autor: Wendela E. Hooftman, Sabine A. E. Geurts, Debby G. J. Beckers, Michiel A. J. Kompier, Madelon L. M. van Hooff, C.M. Ziebertz
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2015
Předmět:
Gerontology
Male
Work
Cross-sectional study
lcsh:Medicine
Social support
Job stress
Life
Progeny
Surveys and Questionnaires
Marriage
Workplace
Household
Fatigue
Work
Health and Performance

Job performance
Multilevel model
Workload
General Medicine
Job experience
Middle Aged
Occupational exposure
Occupation and occupation related phenomena
Job satisfaction
Female
Industrial and organizational psychology
Psychology
Compensation
Healthy Living
Research Article
Human
Adult
Article Subject
Major clinical study
General Biochemistry
Genetics and Molecular Biology

Young Adult
Age
Work home interference
WHC - Work
Health and Care

Humans
Leisure
Aged
General Immunology and Microbiology
lcsh:R
Work and Employment
Gender
Cross-Sectional Studies
Survey data collection
Personal autonomy
ELSS - Earth
Life and Social Sciences

On call work
Stress
Psychological

Demography
Zdroj: BioMed Research International, Vol 2015 (2015)
Biomed Research International, 2015
BioMed Research International
ISSN: 2314-6141
2314-6133
Popis: Objectives. This study examined the relationship between on-call dutyexposure(active and total on-call hours a month, number of calls per duty) and employees’experiencesof being on-call (stress due to unpredictability, ability to relax during inactive on-call periods, restrictions during on-call duties, on-call work demands, and satisfaction with compensation for on-call duties) on the one hand and fatigue, strain-based and time-based work-home interference (WHI), and perceived on-call performance difficulties (PPD) on the other hand.Methods. Cross-sectional survey data were collected among a large heterogeneous sample of Dutch employees (N=5437). The final sample consisted of 157 on-call workers (23–69 years, 71% males). Data were analyzed by means of hierarchical regression analyses (controlling for age and job characteristics).Results. Differences in on-call work exposure were not systematically related to fatigue, WHI, and PPD (allp’s>0.50). The experience of being on-call explained a medium proportion of the variation in fatigue and strain-based WHI and a medium to large proportion of the variation in time-based WHI and PPD over and above the control variables.Conclusions. Our results suggest that it is employees’ experience of being on-call, especially the experience of stress due to the unpredictability, rather than the amount of exposure, that is related to fatigue, WHI, and perceived on-call performance difficulties.
Databáze: OpenAIRE