Job characteristics and off-job activities as predictors of need for recovery, well-being, and fatigue.
University of Konstanz · University of Surrey · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Two empirical studies examined need for recovery (i.e., a person's desire to be temporarily relieved from demands in order to restore his or her resources) as a mediator in the relationship between poor job characteristics (high job demands, low job control) and high off-job demands, on the one hand, and fatigue and poor individual well-being, on the other hand. Multilevel data from a daily survey study in the health service sector (Study 1) showed that high job demands, low job control, and unfavorable off-job activities predicted a high need for recovery. Need for recovery in turn was negatively related to individual well-being. A large-scale survey with a representative sample of the Dutch working…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.55
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 107
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Job attitude
- Job control
- Job performance
- Job satisfaction
- Scale (ratio)
- Job analysis
- Population
- No poverty