Deakin University
Browse

The impact of workload on wellbeing, mental health and depression : a longitudinal study of work perception

conference contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by Katrina Lawson, John Rodwell, Andrew NobletAndrew Noblet
This paper explores the relationships between characteristics of the job (workload, control and support) and organizational justice (distributive, procedural, interpersonal and informational) at Time 1, onto three indicators of psychological health at Time 2 (psychological wellbeing, distress and depression). The sample consisted of sworn members of a state-based police force (n=143). Hierarchical regression analyses indicated that workload was associated with psychological wellbeing, distress and depression at the one-year follow-up. Specifically, high workload at Time 1 was associated with psychological distress and depression at Time 2, and low workload was associated with psychological wellbeing at Time 2. Further, there was a significant relationship between perceived informational justice at Time 1 and psychological wellbeing at Time 2. No significant interaction effects were demonstrated for the job characteristics or organizational justice onto psychological health status. That is, longitudinally, workload directly influences both positive and negative mental health, and informational justice is related to psychological wellbeing. The implications for the demand-control-support model are discussed. The injustice-as-stressor argument was generally not supported.<br>

History

Location

Sydney, New South Wales

Language

eng

Notes

This paper is located on the 86th page in the attached pdf.

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed; E Conference publication

Copyright notice

2009, Australian Psychological Society

Editor/Contributor(s)

P Langford, N Reynolds, J Kehoe

Pagination

85 - 89

Start date

2009-06-25

End date

2009-06-28

ISBN-13

9780909881399

Title of proceedings

IOP 2009 : Proceedings of the 8th Industrial and Organisational Psychology Conference

Event

Industrial and Organisational Psychology. Conference (8th : 2009 : Sydney, New South Wales)

Publisher

Australian Psychological Society

Place of publication

Carlton, Vic.

Usage metrics

    Research Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC