Time Pressure, Time Autonomy, and Sickness Absenteeism in Hospital Employees: A Longitudinal Study on Organizational Absenteeism Records
Version
Published
Date Issued
2018
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Background
Although work absenteeism is in the focus of occupational health, longitudinal studies on organizational absenteeism records in hospital work are lacking. This longitudinal study tests time pressure and lack of time autonomy to be related to higher sickness absenteeism.
Methods
Data was collected for 180 employees (45% nurses) of a Swiss hospital at baseline and at follow-up after 1 year. Absent times (hours per month) were received from the human resources department of the hospital. One-year follow-up of organizational absenteeism records were regressed on self-reported job satisfaction, time pressure, and time autonomy (i.e., control) at baseline.
Results
A multivariate regression showed significant prediction of absenteeism by time pressure at baseline and time autonomy, indicating that a stress process is involved in some sickness absenteeism behavior. Job satisfaction and the interaction of time pressure and time autonomy did not predict sickness absenteeism.
Conclusion
Results confirmed time pressure and time autonomy as limiting factors in healthcare and a key target in work redesign.
Keywords
healthcare ; occupational health ; time autonomy ; work absenteeism ; work stress
Although work absenteeism is in the focus of occupational health, longitudinal studies on organizational absenteeism records in hospital work are lacking. This longitudinal study tests time pressure and lack of time autonomy to be related to higher sickness absenteeism.
Methods
Data was collected for 180 employees (45% nurses) of a Swiss hospital at baseline and at follow-up after 1 year. Absent times (hours per month) were received from the human resources department of the hospital. One-year follow-up of organizational absenteeism records were regressed on self-reported job satisfaction, time pressure, and time autonomy (i.e., control) at baseline.
Results
A multivariate regression showed significant prediction of absenteeism by time pressure at baseline and time autonomy, indicating that a stress process is involved in some sickness absenteeism behavior. Job satisfaction and the interaction of time pressure and time autonomy did not predict sickness absenteeism.
Conclusion
Results confirmed time pressure and time autonomy as limiting factors in healthcare and a key target in work redesign.
Keywords
healthcare ; occupational health ; time autonomy ; work absenteeism ; work stress
Publisher DOI
Journal
Safety and Health at Work
ISSN
2093-7911
Organization
Volume
9
Issue
1
Publisher
Elsevier
Submitter
ServiceAccount
Citation apa
Kottowitz, M. U., Schade, V., Burger, C., Radlinger, L., & Elfering, A. (2018). Time Pressure, Time Autonomy, and Sickness Absenteeism in Hospital Employees: A Longitudinal Study on Organizational Absenteeism Records. In Safety and Health at Work (Vol. 9, Issue 1). Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.6753
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
open access
Name
main.pdf
License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Version
published
Size
266.05 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
533a7702c99011657982edc822026295