TY - JOUR
T1 - Long-Term Development of Employee Well-Being
T2 - A Latent Transition Approach
AU - Mäkikangas, A.
AU - Schaufeli, W.B.
AU - Leskinen, E.
AU - Kinnunen, U.
AU - Hyvönen, K.
AU - Feldt, T.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - The long-term development of employee well-being is still poorly understood. Consequently, in this three-wave 10-year longitudinal study among Finnish managers (n = 402) the development of employee well-being was examined in in detail. Specifically, the long-term development of job-related affective well-being was investigated at the intra-individual level, simultaneously taking into account positive and negative indicators of well-being, the level of well-being, and the direction of change. Further, the issue how (changes in) job resources and employee well-being were related across time was examined. By applying a novel person-centered methodology, factor mixture modeling and latent transition analysis, the results revealed that the development of favorable job-related affective well-being was eight times more probable than that of unfavorable development across the 10-year study period. Job resources predicted a high level of job-related well-being and, also, job resources increased along with favorable changes in well-being. Overall, the findings contribute to knowledge in the area of positive occupational health psychology by offering a detailed picture of the level of job-related affective well-being and its development over time.
AB - The long-term development of employee well-being is still poorly understood. Consequently, in this three-wave 10-year longitudinal study among Finnish managers (n = 402) the development of employee well-being was examined in in detail. Specifically, the long-term development of job-related affective well-being was investigated at the intra-individual level, simultaneously taking into account positive and negative indicators of well-being, the level of well-being, and the direction of change. Further, the issue how (changes in) job resources and employee well-being were related across time was examined. By applying a novel person-centered methodology, factor mixture modeling and latent transition analysis, the results revealed that the development of favorable job-related affective well-being was eight times more probable than that of unfavorable development across the 10-year study period. Job resources predicted a high level of job-related well-being and, also, job resources increased along with favorable changes in well-being. Overall, the findings contribute to knowledge in the area of positive occupational health psychology by offering a detailed picture of the level of job-related affective well-being and its development over time.
KW - Job resources
KW - Job-related affective well-being
KW - Latent transition analysis
KW - Longitudinal
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84948133549&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10902-015-9696-7
DO - 10.1007/s10902-015-9696-7
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84948133549
SN - 1389-4978
VL - 17
SP - 2325
EP - 2345
JO - Journal of Happiness Studies
JF - Journal of Happiness Studies
IS - 6
ER -