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Journal Article

Citation

Nyberg A, Peristera P, Bernhard-Oettel C, Leineweber C. BMC Public Health 2018; 18(1): e828.

Affiliation

Stress Research Institute, Stockholm University, SE-106 91, Stockholm, Sweden.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/s12889-018-5736-7

PMID

29973166

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the present study we used a longitudinal design to examine if work-personal life interference predicted managerial turnover, if depressive symptoms mediated the association, and if the relationships differed by gender.

METHODS: Data were drawn from four waves (2010, 2012, 2014 and 2016) of the Swedish Longitudinal Occupational Survey of Health (SLOSH), a cohort of the Swedish working population. Participants who in any wave reported to have a managerial or other leading position were included (nā€‰=ā€‰717 men and 741 women). Autoregressive longitudinal mediation models within a multilevel structural equation modelling (MSEM) framework, in which repeated measures (level 1) were nested within individuals (level 2), were fitted to data. First, bivariate autoregressive and cross-lagged paths between the variables were fitted in gender stratified models. Secondly, a full gender stratified mediation model was built to estimate if the association between work-personal life interference and turnover was mediated through depressive symptoms. Gender differences in cross-lagged paths were estimated with multiple-group analysis. All analyses were adjusted for age, education, labour market sector, civil status and children living at home, and conducted in MPLUS 7.

RESULTS: In both genders there were significant paths between work-personal life interference and turnover. Depressive symptoms were, however, not found to mediate in the relationship between work-personal life interference and turnover. The models differed significantly between genders.

CONCLUSIONS: Establishing organisational prerequisites for good work-personal life balance among managers may be a means to retain both male and female managerial talent.


Language: en

Keywords

Actual turnover; Autoregressive cross-lagged model; Depressive symptoms; Longitudinal; Mediation; Multilevel structural equation model; Work-personal life interference

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