A Prospective Study of the Association Between Obesity and Burnout Among Apparently Healthy Men and Women

The authors prospectively tested the hypothesis that obesity predicts burnout and the reverse-causation hypothesis that burnout predicts obesity. Respondents were 724 men and 340 women, apparently healthy employees, who underwent routine periodic health examinations at 2 points of time about 18 mont...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of occupational health psychology 2008-01, Vol.13 (1), p.43-57
Hauptverfasser: Armon, Galit, Shirom, Arie, Berliner, Shlomo, Shapira, Itzhak, Melamed, Samuel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The authors prospectively tested the hypothesis that obesity predicts burnout and the reverse-causation hypothesis that burnout predicts obesity. Respondents were 724 men and 340 women, apparently healthy employees, who underwent routine periodic health examinations at 2 points of time about 18 months apart. Obesity was assessed by body mass index, waist-hip ratio, and waist circumference. In regression analyses, done separately for men and women, the authors controlled for depressive symptomatology, sport activity, and Time 1 levels of the criterion. The hypothesis that burnout predicts obesity was not supported. The authors found that Time 1 measures of obesity predicted reductions rather than the hypothesized elevations of Time 2 burnout levels. The authors also found that for male respondents with relatively higher levels of Time 1 burnout, the higher their level of Time 1 obesity measure, the lower their level of T2 burnout.
ISSN:1076-8998
1939-1307
DOI:10.1037/1076-8998.13.1.43