Impact of worktime arrangements on work-home interference among Dutch employees.

OBJECTIVES This study examined the effects of different worktime arrangements on work-home interference while taking into account other work-related factors, private situation and health status, explored gender differences in this relation, and examined reciprocal effects between workhours and work-home interference. METHODS Data from the Maastricht cohort study on fatigue at work were used with 8 months of follow-up (N=6947 at baseline). RESULTS Worktime arrangements were related to work-home interference among the men and women, even after control for confounding. As compared with daywork, baseline shiftwork was associated with higher work-home interference over time. Within daywork, full-time work was prospectively related to higher work-home interference than part-time work was. For full-timers, baseline overtime work, hours of overtime work, change in number of workhours, and commuting time were related to higher work-home interference over time, whereas compensation for overtime work, familiarity with work roster, ability to take a day off, and a decrease in workhours at own request were associated with less work-home interference. For the part-timers, baseline overtime work and commuting time were related to higher work-home interference over time, whereas compensation for overtime, flexible workhours, and ability to take a day off were protective against work-home interference. Reciprocal relations between work-home interference and workhours were also found. CONCLUSIONS Worktime arrangements are clearly related to work-home interference. Because reciprocal effects exist as well, important selection processes may exist. Nevertheless, specific characteristics of worktime arrangements could constitute useful tools for reducing work-home interference.

[1]  S. Geurts,et al.  Associations between overtime and psychological health in high and low reward jobs , 2001 .

[2]  Michael R. Frone,et al.  Prevalence of work-family conflict: Are work and family boundaries asymmetrically permeable? , 1992 .

[3]  Rosalind C. Barnett,et al.  Reduced-Hours Employment , 2000 .

[4]  John Eckenrode,et al.  Stress between Work and Family , 1990 .

[5]  Jeffrey H. Greenhaus,et al.  Sources and conflict between work and family roles. , 1985 .

[6]  S. Hobfoll Conservation of resources. A new attempt at conceptualizing stress. , 1989, The American psychologist.

[7]  D. Ilgen,et al.  Time devoted to job and off-job activities, interrole conflict, and affective experiences. , 1992 .

[8]  M. Goldberg,et al.  Psychosocial factors at work and subsequent depressive symptoms in the Gazel cohort. , 1998, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[9]  I. Kant,et al.  An epidemiological approach to study fatigue in the working population: the Maastricht Cohort Study , 2003, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[10]  Alicia A. Grandey,et al.  The Conservation Of Resources model applied to work–family conflict and strain. , 1999 .

[11]  K. Klein,et al.  Work time, work interference with family, and psychological distress. , 2002, The Journal of applied psychology.

[12]  Rosalind C. Barnett,et al.  Toward a review and reconceptualization of the work/family literature. , 1998 .

[13]  Bohle,et al.  Work/Non-work Conflict and Health in Shiftwork: Relationships with Family Status and Social Support. , 1997, International journal of occupational and environmental health.

[14]  Saija Mauno,et al.  Antecedents and Outcomes of Work-Family Conflict Among Employed Women and Men in Finland , 1998 .

[15]  M. L. Cooper,et al.  Antecedents and outcomes of work-family conflict: testing a model of the work-family interface. , 1992, The Journal of applied psychology.

[16]  A. Shirom,et al.  Conservation of resources theory: Applications to stress and management in the workplace. , 2001 .

[17]  Rosabeth Moss Kanter,et al.  Work and Family in the United States: A Critical Review and Agenda for Research and Policy , 1978 .

[18]  Arlie Russell Hochschild,et al.  The Time Bind: When Work Becomes Home and Home Becomes Work , 1997 .

[19]  Edwin Wagena,et al.  SWING. Ontwikkeling en validering van de "Survey Werk-thuis Interferentie—Nijmegen." , 2000 .

[20]  J. Eckenrode,et al.  Stress and Coping at the Boundary of Work and Family , 1990 .

[21]  S. Hobfoll The Influence of Culture, Community, and the Nested-Self in the Stress Process: Advancing Conservation of Resources Theory , 2001 .

[22]  J. Grzywacz,et al.  Demography , 1986, Prehistoric Fisherfolk of Oman: The Neolithic Village of Ras Al-Hamra RH-5.

[23]  IJmert Kant,et al.  Antecedents and Consequences of Work–Family Conflict: A Prospective Cohort Study , 2003, Journal of occupational and environmental medicine.

[24]  Nicole Jansen,et al.  Need for recovery from work: evaluating short-term effects of working hours, patterns and schedules , 2003, Ergonomics.

[25]  T S Kristensen,et al.  Work schedules and fatigue: a prospective cohort study , 2003, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[26]  T. Monk,et al.  Hours of work : temporal factors in work scheduling , 1985 .

[27]  B. Gutek,et al.  Rational versus gender role explanations for work-family conflict. , 1991 .

[28]  H. Bøggild,et al.  Work environment of Danish shift and day workers. , 2001, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[29]  C. Higgins,et al.  Gender differences in work-family conflict. , 1991 .

[30]  Jeffrey H. Greenhaus,et al.  Sources of Conflict Between Work and Family Roles , 1985 .

[31]  T. Fokkema Combining a job and children: contrasting the health of married and divorced women in the Netherlands? , 2002, Social science & medicine.

[32]  Tammy D. Allen,et al.  Consequences associated with work-to-family conflict: a review and agenda for future research. , 2000 .