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The healthy work organization model: Expanding the view of individual health and well being in the workplace

Historical and Current Perspectives on Stress and Health

ISBN: 978-0-76230-970-2, eISBN: 978-1-84950-181-1

Publication date: 15 November 2002

Abstract

With occupational stress representing just one example, different streams of research have emerged over the past several decades to explain the antecedents to and consequences of possessing a “healthy” workforce. A positive characteristic of these seemingly independent efforts is that a triangulation of results has emerged supporting the importance of attending to the health and well being of the individual worker. A drawback to these efforts, though, is that while utilizing at times the identical constructs, these constructs are configured differently depending on the conceptual premises of the focal framework. In an attempt to bring the different perspectives together, a model of the “healthy work organization” is presented and tested in this chapter. The model recognizes that there are higher-order constructs characterizing many of the component constructs of the previous efforts, and it is at this level that much of the unification of those efforts is achieved. Utilizing structural equation modeling procedures, the healthy work organization model was supported.

Citation

Vandenberg, R.J., Park, K.-O., DeJoy, D.M., Wilson, M.G. and Shannon Griffin-Blake, C. (2002), "The healthy work organization model: Expanding the view of individual health and well being in the workplace", Perrewe, P.L. and Ganster, D.C. (Ed.) Historical and Current Perspectives on Stress and Health (Research in Occupational Stress and Well Being, Vol. 2), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 57-115. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1479-3555(02)02002-4

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2002, Emerald Group Publishing Limited