Workaholism is an important workplace phenomenon that has received less empirical testing than might be expected. This study of 100 New Zealand blue-collar workers tested whether three dimensions of the workaholism triad: work involvement, drive to work and work enjoyment were related to anxiety, depression and insomnia, and in the majority this was supported. Work involvement was positively related to all outcomes, while work enjoyment was negatively related. Drive to work was positively related to anxiety and insomnia only. Overall, consistently, large amounts of variance were explained by the workaholism triad. While previously untested in the literature, a three-way interaction of the workaholism triad was found towards anxiety and inso...
Empirical research on the negative consequences of employee over-involvement continues to grow. In r...
Overlapping aspects between work addiction and work engagement make difficult distinguish the pathol...
OBJECTIVE: To test a theoretical model in which workaholism predicts both directly and indirectly, v...
Workaholism is an important workplace phenomenon that has received less empirical testing than might...
The term workaholism, patterned after the word alcoholism, first appeared in a book by Oates (1971) ...
In recent years there has been increasing attention on the adverse health effects of workaholism, wh...
Background - The underlying mechanisms connecting workaholism on the one hand and ill-health and per...
BACKGROUND: The underlying mechanisms connecting workaholism on the one hand and ill-health and perf...
It is currently unknown if unfavorable working conditions, reflected by the demand–control–support m...
By drawing on effort-recovery theory, we conducted two studies to explore the short-term process thr...
Introduction: In recent years there has been increasing attention to the phenomenon of workaholism (...
The present series of studies examines how the two dimensions of workaholism (working excessively an...
Objective: To test a theoretical model in which workaholism predicts both directly and indirectly, v...
This study investigated the distinctiveness between workaholism and work engagement by examining the...
Recently, Schaufeli et al. (2008) defined workaholism as \u201cthe tendency to work excessively hard...
Empirical research on the negative consequences of employee over-involvement continues to grow. In r...
Overlapping aspects between work addiction and work engagement make difficult distinguish the pathol...
OBJECTIVE: To test a theoretical model in which workaholism predicts both directly and indirectly, v...
Workaholism is an important workplace phenomenon that has received less empirical testing than might...
The term workaholism, patterned after the word alcoholism, first appeared in a book by Oates (1971) ...
In recent years there has been increasing attention on the adverse health effects of workaholism, wh...
Background - The underlying mechanisms connecting workaholism on the one hand and ill-health and per...
BACKGROUND: The underlying mechanisms connecting workaholism on the one hand and ill-health and perf...
It is currently unknown if unfavorable working conditions, reflected by the demand–control–support m...
By drawing on effort-recovery theory, we conducted two studies to explore the short-term process thr...
Introduction: In recent years there has been increasing attention to the phenomenon of workaholism (...
The present series of studies examines how the two dimensions of workaholism (working excessively an...
Objective: To test a theoretical model in which workaholism predicts both directly and indirectly, v...
This study investigated the distinctiveness between workaholism and work engagement by examining the...
Recently, Schaufeli et al. (2008) defined workaholism as \u201cthe tendency to work excessively hard...
Empirical research on the negative consequences of employee over-involvement continues to grow. In r...
Overlapping aspects between work addiction and work engagement make difficult distinguish the pathol...
OBJECTIVE: To test a theoretical model in which workaholism predicts both directly and indirectly, v...