Job design, employment practices and well-being: a systematic review of intervention studies

There is inconsistent evidence that deliberate attempts to improve job design realise improvements in well-being. We investigated the role of other employment practices, either as instruments for job redesign or as instruments that augment job redesign. Our primary outcome was well-being. Where stud...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ergonomics 2017-09, Vol.60 (9), p.1177-1196
Hauptverfasser: Daniels, Kevin, Gedikli, Cigdem, Watson, David, Semkina, Antonina, Vaughn, Oluwafunmilayo
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container_end_page 1196
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1177
container_title Ergonomics
container_volume 60
creator Daniels, Kevin
Gedikli, Cigdem
Watson, David
Semkina, Antonina
Vaughn, Oluwafunmilayo
description There is inconsistent evidence that deliberate attempts to improve job design realise improvements in well-being. We investigated the role of other employment practices, either as instruments for job redesign or as instruments that augment job redesign. Our primary outcome was well-being. Where studies also assessed performance, we considered performance as an outcome. We reviewed 33 intervention studies. We found that well-being and performance may be improved by: training workers to improve their own jobs; training coupled with job redesign; and system wide approaches that simultaneously enhance job design and a range of other employment practices. We found insufficient evidence to make any firm conclusions concerning the effects of training managers in job redesign and that participatory approaches to improving job design have mixed effects. Successful implementation of interventions was associated with worker involvement and engagement with interventions, managerial commitment to interventions and integration of interventions with other organisational systems. Practitioner Summary: Improvements in well-being and performance may be associated with system-wide approaches that simultaneously enhance job design, introduce a range of other employment practices and focus on worker welfare. Training may have a role in initiating job redesign or augmenting the effects of job design on well-being.
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subjects Adult
Design
Design improvements
Employment
Employment - organization & administration
Employment - psychology
employment practices
Female
Humans
Integration
Intervention
interventions
Job design
Job Satisfaction
Male
Middle Aged
Redesign
Reviews
Space life sciences
Systematic review
Training
Well-being
Work Performance - organization & administration
Work Simplification
Workers
Young Adult
title Job design, employment practices and well-being: a systematic review of intervention studies
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