Correlates of employees' perceptions of a healthy work environment

Publication type
Journal article
Authors
Lowe GS, Schellenberg G, Shannon HS
Date published
2003 Jul 01
Journal
American Journal of Health Promotion
Volume
17
Issue
6
Pages
390-399
PMID
12858619
Open Access?
No
Abstract
PURPOSE: This study analyzed correlates of workers' perceptions of the extent to which their work environment is healthy and how these perceptions influence job satisfaction, employee commitment, workplace morale, absenteeism, and intent to quit. DESIGN: One-time cross-sectional telephone survey. SETTING: Canadian employees in 2000. SUBJECTS: A randomly chosen, nationally representative sample of 2500 employed respondents, using a household sampling frame. The response rate was 39.2%. Self-employed individuals were excluded, leaving a subsample of 2112 respondents. MEASURES: The dependent variable was the response to the item, 'The work environment is healthy' (5-point strongly agree-strongly disagree Likert scale). Independent variables used in bivariate and ordinary least-squares regression analyses included sociodemographic characteristics, employment status, organizational characteristics, and scales that measured job demands, intrinsic rewards, extrinsic rewards, communication/social support, employee influence, and job resources. Perceptions of a healthy work environment were related to job satisfaction, commitment, morale (measured on a 5-point scale), number of self-reported absenteeism days in the past 12 months, and whether or not the respondent had looked for a job with another employer in the past 12 months. RESULTS: The strongest correlate of a healthy work environment was a scale of good communication and social support (beta = .27). The next strongest was a job demands scale (beta = -.15.) Employees in self-rated healthier work environments had significantly (p