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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The relationship between job satisfaction and health: a meta-analysis

TLDR
The relationships found suggest that job satisfaction level is an important factor influencing the health of workers, and organisations should include the development of stress management policies to identify and eradicate work practices that cause most job dissatisfaction as part of any exercise aimed at improving employee health.
Abstract
Background: A vast number of published studies have suggested a link between job satisfaction levels and health. The sizes of the relationships reported vary widely. Narrative overviews of this relationship have been published, but no systematic meta-analysis review has been conducted. Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis of 485 studies with a combined sample size of 267 995 individuals was conducted, evaluating the research evidence linking self-report measures of job satisfaction to measures of physical and mental wellbeing. Results: The overall correlation combined across all health measures was r = 0.312 (0.370 after Schmidt- Hunter adjustment). Job satisfaction was most strongly associated with mental/psychological problems; strongest relationships were found for burnout (corrected r = 0.478), self-esteem(r = 0.429), depression (r = 0.428), and anxiety(r = 0.420). The correlation with subjective physical illness was more modest (r = 0.287). Conclusions: Correlations in excess of 0.3 are rare in this context. The relationships found suggest that job satisfaction level is an important factor influencing the health of workers. Organisations should include the development of stress management policies to identify and eradicate work practices that cause most job dissatisfaction as part of any exercise aimed at improving employee health. Occupational health clinicians should consider counselling employees diagnosed as having psychological problems to critically evaluate their work—and help them to explore ways of gaining greater satisfaction from this important aspect of their life.

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Citations
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A meta-analysis of work-family conflict and various outcomes with a special emphasis on cross-domain versus matching-domain relations.

TL;DR: Work-family conflict was analyzed bidirectionally in terms of work interference with family (WIF) and family interference with work (FIW), and it was shown that WIF and FIW are consistently related to all 3 types of outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Happiness at work.

TL;DR: A review of the definition, causes and consequences of happiness at work can be found in this paper, where the authors also draw on insights from the expanding positive psychology literature on happiness in general.
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Do burnout and work engagement predict depressive symptoms and life satisfaction? A three-wave seven-year prospective study.

TL;DR: Work-related well-being predicts general wellbeing in the long-term, and burnout predicts depressive symptoms and life dissatisfaction from T1 to T2 and from T2 to T3, even after adjusting for the impact of burnout.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chronic psychosocial factors and acute physiological responses to laboratory-induced stress in healthy populations: a quantitative review of 30 years of investigations.

TL;DR: The results largely reflect an integrated stress response pattern of hypo- or hyperactivity depending on the specific nature of the psychosocial background.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Relationship Between Professional Burnout and Quality and Safety in Healthcare: A Meta-Analysis.

TL;DR: In this paper, a meta-analysis examined the relationship between provider burnout (emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment) and the quality (perceived quality, patient satisfaction) and safety of healthcare.
References
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Book

Practical Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analysis procedure called “Meta-Analysis Interpretation for Meta-Analysis Selecting, Computing and Coding the Effect Size Statistic and its applications to Data Management Analysis Issues and Strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of the Job Diagnostic Survey

TL;DR: The Job Diagnostic Survey (JDS) as discussed by the authors was developed to diagnose existing jobs to determine if (and how) they might be redesigned to improve employee motivation and productivity, and to evaluate the effects of job changes on employees.
Book

Methods of Meta-Analysis: Correcting Error and Bias in Research Findings

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a meta-analysis of Artifact Distributions and their impact on study outcomes. But they focus mainly on the second-order sampling error and related issues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Overall job satisfaction: how good are single-item measures?

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of single-item measures ofOverall job satisfaction found an average uncorrected correlation of .63 (SD = .09) with scale measures of overall job satisfaction, which is slightly lower than the overall mean correlation.
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Trending Questions (2)
What are the correlates of job satisfaction??

Job satisfaction correlates with mental/psychological issues like burnout, self-esteem, depression, and anxiety more strongly than with physical complaints, with correlations exceeding 0.3.

How do job satisfaction relates to occupational health for migrant workers?

The provided paper does not specifically mention the relationship between job satisfaction and occupational health for migrant workers.