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      Going to work ill: A meta-analysis of the correlates of presenteeism and a dual-path model.

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          Abstract

          Interest in presenteeism, attending work while ill, has flourished in light of its consequences for individual well-being and organizational productivity. Our goal was to identify its most significant causes and correlates by quantitatively summarizing the extant research. Additionally, we built an empirical model of some key correlates and compared the etiology of presenteeism versus absenteeism. We used meta-analysis (in total, K = 109 samples, N = 175,965) to investigate the correlates of presenteeism and meta-analytic structural equation modeling to test the empirical model. Salient correlates of working while ill included general ill health, constraints on absenteeism (e.g., strict absence policies, job insecurity), elevated job demands and felt stress, lack of job and personal resources (e.g., low support and low optimism), negative relational experiences (e.g., perceived discrimination), and positive attitudes (satisfaction, engagement, and commitment). Moreover, our dual process model clarified how job demands and job and personal resources elicit presenteeism via both health impairment and motivational paths, and they explained more variation in presenteeism than absenteeism. The study sheds light on the controversial act of presenteeism, uncovering both positive and negative underlying mechanisms. The greater variance explained in presenteeism as opposed to absenteeism underlines the opportunities for researchers to meaningfully investigate the behavior and for organizations to manage it. (PsycINFO Database Record

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Occup Health Psychol
          Journal of occupational health psychology
          American Psychological Association (APA)
          1939-1307
          1076-8998
          Jul 2016
          : 21
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Norwich Business School, University of East Anglia.
          [2 ] Department of Management, John Molson School of Business, Concordia University.
          Article
          2015-51045-001
          10.1037/ocp0000015
          26550958
          8960a690-8e77-4510-9c82-06b2fd007cd1
          History

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