Job demands and job resources as predictors of absence duration and frequency
Journal of Vocational Behavior 62(2): 341-356
Article 2003 English
Authors
AB
Arnold B. Bakker
ED
Evangelia Demerouti
EB
Elpine M. de Boer
Abstract
1 min read
This study among 214 nutrition production employees uses the Job Demands–Resources (JD–R) model to predict future company registered absenteeism. According to this model, job demands are primarily responsible for health impairment, whereas job resources lead primarily to increased motivation and attachment to work and the organization. Consistent with hypotheses derived from the JD–R model and the absenteeism literature, results of structural equation modeling analyses show that job demands are unique predictors of burnout (i.e., exhaustion and cynicism) and indirectly of absence duration, whereas job resources are unique predictors of organizational commitment, and indirectly of absence spells. These findings have implications for individual and organizational interventions aimed at reducing absenteeism.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.