reviewJournal of Applied PsychologyJan 1, 2005Closed access

Psychological and Physical Well-Being During Unemployment: A Meta-Analytic Study.

Oregon State University · University of Minnesota · +1 more institution

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Abstract

The authors used theoretical models to organize the diverse unemployment literature, and meta-analytic techniques were used to examine the impact of unemployment on worker well-being across 104 empirical studies with 437 effect sizes. Unemployed individuals had lower psychological and physical well-being than did their employed counterparts. Unemployment duration and sample type (school leaver vs. mature unemployed) moderated the relationship between mental health and unemployment, but the current unemployment rate and the amount of unemployment benefits did not. Within unemployed samples, work-role centrality, coping resources (personal, social, financial, and time structure), cognitive appraisals, and coping…

Citation impact

2,260
total citations
FWCI
54.60
Percentile
100%
References
306
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Unemployment
  • Psychology
  • Mental health
  • Centrality
  • Coping (psychology)
  • Well-being
  • Meta-analysis
  • Sample (material)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Decent work and economic growth
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