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The Assessment of Psychosocial Work Conditions and Their Relationship to Well-Being: A Multi-Study Report.

Isabell KuczynskiMartin MädlerYacine TaibiJessica Lang
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2020)
The aim of this multi-study report is to present a questionnaire that enables researchers and practitioners to assess and evaluate psychosocial risks related to well-being. In Study 1, we conducted a cross-sectional online-survey in 15 German companies from 2016 to 2017 to verify factor- and criterion-related validity. Data consisted of 1151 employee self-ratings. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses resulted in an eight-factor structure (CFI = 0.902, RMSEA = 0.058, and SRMR = 0.070). All scales held to excellent internal consistency values (α = 0.65-0.90) and were related significantly to well-being (r = 0.17-0.35, p < 0.001). A second, longitudinal study in 2018 showed satisfying convergent and discriminant validity (N = 293) to scales from KFZA and COPSOQ. Test-retest reliability (N = 73; α = 0.65-0.88, p < 0.05) was also good. The instrument provides incremental validity above existing instruments since it explains additional variance in well-being.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • cross sectional
  • machine learning
  • climate change
  • social media
  • patient reported outcomes
  • data analysis
  • general practice