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

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Article

Jansen, Nicole W.H. ; Kant, Ijmert ; Swaen, Gerard M.H. ; Kristensen, Tage S.

Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health

2004

30

2

139-148

arrangement of working time ; conflict ; family responsibilities ; fatigue

Netherlands

https://www.sjweh.fi/

English

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"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. ... 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."

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