Workaholism as predictor of work-family conflict and mental well-being of public and private sector employees
Sania Tahir, Saadia Aziz
Workaholism is employee's unnecessary deep immersion into his/her work to the extent that it affects his/her health. Present day work environment and competition foster such traits that propel an employee to opt for such work style. Current study is about the predictive relationship of workaholism with work-family conflict and mental well-being of employees. Participants for present study are from different public and private sector organizations. The study meets its objectives in two phases; phase I is tryout and phase II is main study. WorkBat, Work and Family Conflict Scale, and Warwick Edinburgh Mental Well Being Scale along demographic sheet and consent form are used for data collection. Besides determining psychometric properties of scales, t-test, correlation coefficient, and regression analysis are run. Findings of the study reveal significant positive relationship between workaholim and work-family conflict and significant negative correlation between workaholism and mental well-being. Significant differences emerge in study variables with reference to public and private sector, gender, and marital status. Moreover workaholism significantly predicts work family-conflict and mental well-being. Study highlights the significant predictive relationship of workaholic trait that contributes towards raised work-family conflict and poor mental well-being. Limitations of the study are highlighted and future implications are also discussed.
Year of publication: |
2019
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Authors: | Tahir, Sania ; Aziz, Saadia |
Published in: |
Pakistan journal of commerce and social sciences. - Lahore : [Verlag nicht ermittelbar], ISSN 2309-8619, ZDB-ID 2526678-0. - Vol. 13.2019, 2, p. 419-435
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Subject: | workaholism | work-family conflict | mental well-being | workbat | and public and private sector employees | Familie-Beruf | Work-life balance | Privatwirtschaft | Private sector | Arbeitszufriedenheit | Job satisfaction | Zufriedenheit | Satisfaction | Psychische Krankheit | Mental disorder | Öffentlicher Dienst | Civil service |
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