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Work-family conflict and enrichment from the perspective of psychosocial resources: comparing Finnish healthcare workers by working schedules

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Article

Mauno, Saija ; Ruokolainen, Mervi ; Kinnunen, Ulla

Applied Ergonomics

2015

48

May

86-94

nurse ; shift work ; work-life balance ; working time

Finland

Working time and leave

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apergo.2014.11.009

English

Bibliogr.

"We examined work–family conflict (WFC) and work–family enrichment (WFE) by comparing Finnish nurses, working dayshifts (non-shiftworkers, n = 874) and non-dayshifts. The non-dayshift employees worked either two different dayshifts (2-shiftworkers, n = 490) or three different shifts including nightshifts (3-shiftworkers, n = 270). Specifically, we investigated whether different resources, i.e. job control, managers' work–family support, co-workers' work–family support, control at home, personal coping strategies, and schedule satisfaction, predicted differently WFC and WFE in these three groups. Results showed that lower managers' work–family support predicted higher WFC only among 3-shiftworkers, whereas lower co-workers' support associated with increased WFC only in non-shiftworkers. In addition, shiftworkers reported higher WFC than non-shiftworkers. However, the level of WFE did not vary by schedule types. Moreover, the predictors of WFE varied only very little across schedule types. Shiftwork organizations should pay more attention to family–friendly management in order to reduce WFC among shiftworkers."

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