Title
Antecedents and consequences of employee absenteeism: A longitudinal perspective on the role of job satisfaction and burnout
Author
Ybema, J.F.
Smulders, P.G.W.
Bongers, P.M.
TNO Kwaliteit van Leven
Publication year
2010
Abstract
This study examined the interrelations between registered employee absenteeism, job satisfaction, and burnout in a longitudinal design with four yearly waves of data. The participants were 844 workers in 34 companies in The Netherlands. In line with the predictions, a reciprocal relationship between job satisfaction and absence frequency was found. Lower job satisfaction increased absence frequency in the following year, whereas higher absence frequency lowered subsequent job satisfaction. Contrary to the prediction, more time lost due to absence increased job satisfaction in the following year. Furthermore, it was found that higher burnout enhanced future time lost due to absence, and lowered future job satisfaction. Finally, individuals who were frequently absent in one year, were more likely to have a prolonged absence in the following year. © 2009 Psychology Press.
Subject
Workplace
Burnout
Employee absenteeism
Job satisfaction
Longitudinal research
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:98b42702-4333-48b8-95f3-f58c17fa1d68
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/13594320902793691
TNO identifier
347313
ISSN
1359-432X
Source
European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, 19 (1), 102-124
Document type
article