Title : ( Should you switch off or stay engaged? The consequences of thinking about work on the trajectory of psychological well-being over time. )
Authors: Abbas Firoozabadi , Sjir Uitdewilligen , Fred R. H. Zijlstra ,Access to full-text not allowed by authors
Abstract
This study examined how 2 different ways of being mentally engaged with work-related issues during evenings (affective rumination and problem-solving pondering) cause changes in psychological well-being over a 1-year period. We conducted a 3-wave longitudinal study with a time lag of 6 months between each wave. At the first measurement moment, participants filled out a survey over 5 consecutive working days assessing work-related affective rumination and problem-solving pondering during evenings. Exhaustion and health complaints were assessed at the first measurement moment as well as after 6 and 12 months. The 3 waves of data obtained from a total of 123 participants with full-time and primarily mentally demanding jobs were analyzed using latent growth curve modeling (LGM). The results showed that affective rumination is a significant predictor of increase in exhaustion over time. Problem-solving pondering was not found to be a significant predictor of change in psychological well-being over time. These findings demonstrate that work-related rumination during evenings may lead to health problems over time depending on the type of rumination. It suggests that unlike affective rumination, problem-solving pondering during evenings has no influence on psychological well-being over time.
Keywords
, psychological well-being, exhaustion, recovery, work-related rumination, problem-solving@article{paperid:1088489,
author = {Firoozabadi, Abbas and Sjir Uitdewilligen and Fred R. H. Zijlstra},
title = {Should you switch off or stay engaged? The consequences of thinking about work on the trajectory of psychological well-being over time.},
journal = {Journal of Occupational Health Psychology},
year = {2018},
volume = {23},
number = {2},
month = {April},
issn = {1076-8998},
pages = {278--288},
numpages = {10},
keywords = {psychological well-being; exhaustion; recovery; work-related rumination; problem-solving},
}
%0 Journal Article
%T Should you switch off or stay engaged? The consequences of thinking about work on the trajectory of psychological well-being over time.
%A Firoozabadi, Abbas
%A Sjir Uitdewilligen
%A Fred R. H. Zijlstra
%J Journal of Occupational Health Psychology
%@ 1076-8998
%D 2018