Work, recovery activities, and individual well-being: A diary study.

S Sonnentag�- Journal of occupational health psychology, 2001 - psycnet.apa.org
Journal of occupational health psychology, 2001psycnet.apa.org
This study extends previous research on respite from work and addresses the question of
how individuals use their leisure time to recover from work. It is hypothesized that time spent
on work-related and household activities has a negative effect on well-being, whereas low-
effort, social, and physical activities are assumed to have a positive effect. One hundred
Dutch teachers completed a diary on leisure time activities and situational well-being for 5
days, and work situation variables were assessed with a questionnaire. Multilevel analyses�…
Abstract
This study extends previous research on respite from work and addresses the question of how individuals use their leisure time to recover from work. It is hypothesized that time spent on work-related and household activities has a negative effect on well-being, whereas low-effort, social, and physical activities are assumed to have a positive effect. One hundred Dutch teachers completed a diary on leisure time activities and situational well-being for 5 days, and work situation variables were assessed with a questionnaire. Multilevel analyses in which preleisure well-being and work situation variables were entered as control variables supported 4 of the 5 hypotheses. Moreover, a lagged effect of high time pressure on poor situational well-being was found. The study showed that leisure time activities and a low-stress work situation contribute independently to an individual's well-being.(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
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