Many studies have shown that an unfavourable psychosocial environment increases the risk of mental and physical illness, as well as absenteeism, or sickness absence. However, more costly than absenteeism is presenteeism, where a person is present at work even though disabled by a mental or physical illness. We sought to identify factors explaining why workers would come to work even when their health is impaired. In a cross‐sectional design data were collected from 3825 employees of a Canadian organisation. The results show a high occurrence of presenteeism: workers went to work in spite of illness 50% of the time. Presenteeism propensity (the percentage of days worked while ill over total number of sick days) was higher for workers who were ill more often. Heavier workloads, higher skill discretion, harmonious relationships with colleagues, role conflict and precarious job status increased presenteeism, but decision authority did not. Workers reporting high psychological distress and more severe psychosomatic complaints were also more likely to report higher rates of presenteeism. These results suggest that stress research should not only include absenteeism as an outcome indicator, but also consider presenteeism.
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1 December 2006
Review Article|
December 01 2006
At work but ill: psychosocial work environment and well‐being determinants of presenteeism propensity Available to Purchase
Caroline Biron;
Caroline Biron
Management School, Lancaster University
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Jean‐Pierre Brun;
Jean‐Pierre Brun
Faculty of Administration, Laval University, Québec
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Hans Ivers;
Hans Ivers
Faculty of Administration, Laval University, Québec
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Cary Cooper
Cary Cooper
Management School, Lancaster University
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2042-8731
Print ISSN: 1746-5729
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2006
Journal of Public Mental Health (2006) 5 (4): 26–37.
Citation
Biron C, Brun J, Ivers H, Cooper C (2006), "At work but ill: psychosocial work environment and well‐being determinants of presenteeism propensity". Journal of Public Mental Health, Vol. 5 No. 4 pp. 26–37, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/17465729200600029
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