Employee health, communication and absenteeism

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaper

114 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Absenteeism figures are increasingly applied as an integrated measure of health in the working population. However, a comprehensive overview of employee well-being
(compromising the relative impact of physical, psychological, and organizational
components) and how this relates to reported absence frequency and duration is still lacking. The present study investigates these relationships. The study has been conducted in a Dutch subsidiary of an international financial consultancy firm. Three types of data collection were used: a web-based survey among the firm’s employees, a physical health check, and the employees’ absence rates reported to the company. Together the questionnaire and the health check included the following clusters of independent variables: (a) personal characteristics, (b) job characteristics, (c) physical health, (d) self-reported well-being, and (e) perceptions of organization and communication. Of the five clusters of variables, the perceptions of organization and communication variables appeared to be the strongest predictors of absence frequency. This study did not find the assumed relationship between physical related wellbeing and individual absence duration.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages28
Publication statusPublished - 2007
Event57th Annual Conference of the International Communication Association, ICA 2007: Creating Communication: Content, Control, & Critique - San Francisco, CA, San Francisco, United States
Duration: 24 May 200728 May 2007
Conference number: 57

Conference

Conference57th Annual Conference of the International Communication Association, ICA 2007
Abbreviated titleICA
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CitySan Francisco
Period24/05/0728/05/07
OtherMay 24-28, 2007

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Employee health, communication and absenteeism'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this