To read this content please select one of the options below:

Conceptualizing and measuring occupational social well-being: a validation study

Ali Kazemi (School of Health and Education, University of Skövde, Skövde, Sweden)

International Journal of Organizational Analysis

ISSN: 1934-8835

Article publication date: 13 March 2017

804

Abstract

Purpose

The current conceptualizations and measurements of well-being are inadequate in the context of work. Specifically, well-being research has neglected the social aspects of well-being. Therefore, the present study aims to investigate the validity of a multi-dimensional view of occupational social well-being.

Design/methodology/approach

Data were collected in an educational setting, i.e. six different schools in a Swedish municipality. A total of 314 teachers and other categories of school staff (239 females and 75 males) participated in a survey study.

Findings

Results provided empirical support for a multi-dimensional view of occupational social well-being. The dimensions were integration, acceptance, contribution, actualization and coherence, and they were differentially correlated with previous measures of well-being. Furthermore, occupational social well-being accounted for additional variance in work tension, overall job satisfaction and organizational commitment over and above the variance accounted for by positive and negative affect and satisfaction with life, indicating the value of taking domain-specific social indicators of well-being into account in explaining various employee outcomes.

Practical implications

Occupational social well-being is an umbrella term for describing the well-lived social life in the context of work. As such, this is a crucial part of a holistic view of well-being at work. Thus, effective employee well-being enhancement programs should not only focus on physical and mental health promotion or competence development but must also include measures of relational experience and functioning as discussed in the present study.

Originality/value

This is the first study to measure and validate occupational social well-being as an attempt to complement existing measures of subjective and psychological well-being. Measures of social aspects of well-being are crucial to assess as it has been argued in previous research that context-free measures of well-being might render misleading results.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This article is a revised version of a paper presented at the 7th GRASP (Group and Social Psychology) Conference in Gothenburg, Sweden. Thanks are due to Adrian Furnham, Kjell Törnblom and the late Kjell Granström for valuable suggestions and discussions.

Citation

Kazemi, A. (2017), "Conceptualizing and measuring occupational social well-being: a validation study", International Journal of Organizational Analysis, Vol. 25 No. 1, pp. 45-61. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOA-07-2015-0889

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles