The Determinants and Outcomes of Absence Behavior: A Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
3. Methodology
- -
- document type: article;
- -
- language: English;
- -
- subject area: “Business, Management and Accounting” and “Economics, Econometrics and Finance.”
4. Results
4.1. Determinants of Absenteeism
4.2. Outcomes of Absenteeism
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Ahn, Seungjun, Sang Hyun Lee, and Robert P. Steel. 2013. Construction Workers’ Perceptions and Attitudes toward Social Norms as Predictors of their Absence Behavior. Journal of Construction Engineering and Management 140: 1–8. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Arai, Mahmood, and Peter Skogman Thoursie. 2005. Incentives and Selection in Cyclical Absenteeism. Labour Economics 12: 269–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Austrom, Douglas R., Timothy T. Baldwin, and Granger J. Macy. 1988. The Single Worker: An Empirical Exploration of Attitudes, Behavior, and Well-Being. Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences/Revue Canadienne des Sciences de l’Administration 5: 22–29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Avery, Derek R., Sabrina D. Volpone, Patrick F. McKay, Eden B. King, and David C. Wilson. 2012. Is Relational Demography Relative? How Employment Status Influences Effects of Supervisor–subordinate Demographic similarity. Journal of Business and Psychology 27: 83–98. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bamberger, Peter, and Michal Biron. 2007. Group Norms and Excessive Absenteeism: The Role of Peer Referent Others. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 103: 179–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Barmby, Tim, Michael Nolan, and Rainer Winkelmann. 2001. Contracted Workdays and Absence. The Manchester School 69: 269–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bentley, Tim A., Bevan Catley, Helena Cooper-Thomas, Dianne Gardner, Michael P. O’Driscoll, Alison Dale, and Linda Trenberth. 2012. Perceptions of Workplace Bullying in the New Zealand Travel Industry: Prevalence and Management Strategies. Tourism Management 33: 351–60. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bitner, Mary Jo, Bernard H. Booms, and Mary Stanfield Tetreault. 1990. The Service Encounter: Diagnosing Favorable and Unfavorable Incidents. The Journal of Marketing 54: 71–84. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Blau, Gary J. 1985. Relationship of Extrinsic, Intrinsic, and Demographic Predictors to Various Types of Withdrawal Behaviors. Journal of Applied Psychology 70: 442–50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Blau, Gary J. 1986. Job Involvement and Organizational Commitment as Interactive Predictors of Tardiness and Absenteeism. Journal of Management 12: 577–84. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bolin, Aaron, and Linette Heatherly. 2001. Predictors of Employee Deviance: The Relationship between Bad Attitudes and Bad Behavior. Journal of Business and Psychology 15: 405–18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Boon, Corine, Frank D. Belschak, Deanne N. Den Hartog, and Mark Pijnenburg. 2014. Perceived Human Resource Management Practices. Journal of Personnel Psychology 13: 21–33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Brooke, Paul P., and James L. Price. 1989. The Determinants of Employee Absenteeism: An Empirical Test of a Causal Model. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 62: 1–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Brown, Sarah. 1999. Worker Absenteeism and Overtime Bans. Applied Economics 31: 165–74. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Butler, Richard J., B. Delworth Gardner, and Harold H. Gardner. 1998. More than Cost Shifting: Moral Hazard Lowers Productivity. Journal of Risk and Insurance 65: 671–88. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Byron, Kristin, and Suzanne Peterson. 2002. The Impact of a Large-Scale Traumatic Event on Individual and Organizational Outcomes: Exploring Employee and Company Reactions to September 11, 2001. Journal of Organizational Behavior 23: 895–910. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Carmeli, Abraham, Revital Shalom, and Jacob Weisberg. 2007. Considerations in Organizational Career Advancement: What Really Matters. Personnel Review 36: 190–205. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chadwick-Jones, John K., Colin A. Brown, Nigel Nicholson, and C. Sheppard. 1971. Absence Measures: Their Reliability and Stability in an Industrial Setting. Personnel Psychology 24: 463–70. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cheloha, Randall S., and James L. Farr. 1980. Absenteeism, Job Involvement, and Job Satisfaction in an Organizational Setting. Journal of Applied Psychology 65: 467–73. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Chullen, C. Logan, Benjamin B. Dunford, Ingo Angermeier, R. Wayne Boss, and Alan D. Boss. 2010. Minimizing Deviant Behavior in Healthcare Organizations: The Effects of Supportive Leadership and Job Design. Journal of Healthcare Management 55: 381–97. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Chung, Beth G., and Benjamin Schneider. 2002. Serving Multiple Masters: Role Conflict Experienced by Service Employees. Journal of Services Marketing 16: 70–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cohen, Aaron. 1998. An Examination of the Relationship between Work Commitment and Work Outcomes among Hospital Nurses. Scandinavian Journal of Management 14: 1–17. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cohen, Aaron, and Ronit Golan. 2007. Predicting Absenteeism and Turnover Intentions by Past Absenteeism and Work Attitudes: An Empirical Examination of Female Employees in Long Term Nursing Care Facilities. Career Development International 12: 416–32. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Colquitt, Jason A., Raymond A. Noe, and Christine L. Jackson. 2002. Justice in Teams: Antecedents and Consequences of Procedural Justice Climate. Personnel Psychology 55: 83–109. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cornelissen, Thomas, Oliver Himmler, and Tobias Koenig. 2013. Fairness Spillovers—The Case of Taxation. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 90: 164–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cucchiella, Federica, Massimo Gastaldi, and Luigi Ranieri. 2014. Managing Absenteeism in the Workplace: The Case of an Italian Multiutility Company. Procedia-Social and Behavioral Sciences 150: 1157–66. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Daouk-Öyry, Lina, Abdel-Latef Anouze, Farah Otaki, Nuhad Yazbik Dumit, and Ibrahim Osman. 2014. The JOINT Model of Nurse Absenteeism and Turnover: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Nursing Studies 51: 93–110. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Dasgupta, Shilpee A., Damodar Suar, and Seema Singh. 2012. Impact of Managerial Communication Styles on Employees’ Attitudes and Behaviours. Employee Relations 35: 173–99. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Davey, Mandy M., Greta Cummings, Christine V. Newburn-Cook, and Eliza A. Lo. 2009. Predictors of Nurse Absenteeism in Hospitals: A Systematic Review. Journal of Nursing Management 17: 312–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- De Boer, Elpine M., Arnold B. Bakker, Jef E. Syroit, and Wilmar B. Schaufeli. 2002. Unfairness at Work as a Predictor of Absenteeism. Journal of Organizational Behavior 23: 181–97. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Deery, Stephen J., and Roderick D. Iverson. 2005. Labor-Management Cooperation: Antecedents and Impact on Organizational Performance. ILR Review 58: 588–609. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Deery, Stephen J., Peter J. Erwin, Roderick D. Iverson, and Margaret L. Ambrose. 1995. The Determinants of Absenteeism: Evidence from Australian Blue–Collar Employees. International Journal of Human Resource Management 6: 825–48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Deery, Stephen J., Roderick D. Iverson, Donna M. Buttigieg, and Christopher D. Zatzick. 2014. Can Union Voice Make a Difference? The Effect of Union Citizenship Behavior on Employee Absence. Human Resource Management 53: 211–28. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dehue, Francine, Catherine Bolman, Trijntje Völlink, and Mieneke Pouwelse. 2012. Coping with Bullying at Work and Health Related Problems. International Journal of Stress Management 19: 175–97. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Denyer, David, and David Tranfield. 2009. Producing a Systematic Review. In The SAGE Handbook of Organizational Research Methods. Edited by David Buchanan and Alan Bryman. London: SAGE Publications Ltd., pp. 671–89. [Google Scholar]
- Diestel, Stefan, and Klaus-Helmut Schmidt. 2012. Lagged Mediator Effects of Self-Control Demands on Psychological Strain and Absenteeism. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 85: 556–78. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dionne, Georges, and Benoit Dostie. 2007. New Evidence on the Determinants of Absenteeism Using Linked Employer-Employee Data. ILR Review 61: 108–20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Drakopoulos, Stavros A., and Katerina Grimani. 2013. Injury-Related Absenteeism and Job Satisfaction: Insights from Greek and UK Data. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 24: 3496–511. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Duff, Angus J., Mark Podolsky, Michal Biron, and Christopher C. A. Chan. 2015. The Interactive Effect of Team and Manager Absence on Employee Absence: A Multilevel Field Study. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 88: 61–79. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Durand, V. Mark. 1985. Employee Absenteeism: A Selective Review of Antecedents and Consequences. Journal of Organizational Behavior Management 7: 135–68. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Farrell, Dan, and James C. Petersen. 1984. Commitment, Absenteeism, and Turnover of New Employees: A Longitudinal Study. Human Relations 37: 681–92. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Festing, Marion, Yvonne Groening, Rudiger Kabst, and Wolfgang Weber. 1999. Financial Participation in Europe-Determinants and Outcomes. Economic and Industrial Democracy 20: 295–329. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Frick, Bernd, and Miguel Á. Malo. 2008. Labor Market Institutions and Individual Absenteeism in the European Union: The Relative Importance of Sickness Benefit Systems and Employment Protection Legislation. Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society 47: 505–29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Frooman, Jeff, Morris B. Mendelson, and J. Kevin Murphy. 2012. Transformational and Passive Avoidant Leadership as Determinants of Absenteeism. Leadership & Organization Development Journal 33: 447–63. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fugate, Mel, Gregory E. Prussia, and Angelo J. Kinicki. 2012. Managing Employee Withdrawal during Organizational Change: The Role of Threat Appraisal. Journal of Management 38: 890–914. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Garcia, Richard L. 1987. Sick-Time Usage by Management and Professional Employees in the Public Sector. Review of Public Personnel Administration 7: 45–59. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Garrison, Kathleen R., and Paul M. Muchinsky. 1977. Attitudinal and Biographical Predictors of Incidental Absenteeism. Journal of Vocational Behavior 10: 221–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gellatly, Ian R. 1995. Individual and Group Determinants of Employee Absenteeism: Test of a Causal Model. Journal of Organizational Behavior 16: 469–85. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gellatly, Ian R., and Andrew A. Luchak. 1998. Personal and Organizational Determinants of Perceived Absence Norms. Human Relations 51: 1085–102. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gerstenfeld, Arthur. 1969. Employee Absenteeism: New Insights: Data Reveal External Factors. Business Horizons 12: 51–57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gibson, R. Oliver. 1966. Toward a Conceptualization of Absence Behavior of Personnel in Organization. Administrative Science Quarterly 11: 107–33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Goldberg, Caren B., and David A. Waldman. 2000. Modeling Employee Absenteeism: Testing Alternative Measures and Mediated Effects Based on Job Satisfaction. Journal of Organizational Behavior 21: 665–76. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Goodman, Paul S., and Robert S. Atkin. 1984. Effects of Absenteeism on Individuals and Organizations. Tepper School of Business. Paper 848. Available online: http://repository.cmu.edu/tepper/848 (accessed on 5 July 2018).
- Harrison, David A., and Joseph J. Martocchio. 1998. Time for Absenteeism: A 20-Year Review of Origins, Offshoots, and Outcomes. Journal of Management 24: 305–50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hassan, Shahidul, Bradley E. Wright, and Gary Yukl. 2014. Does Ethical Leadership Matter in Government? Effects on Organizational Commitment, Absenteeism, and Willingness to Report Ethical Problems. Public Administration Review 74: 333–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hattrup, Keith, Matthew S. O’Connell, and Peter H. Wingate. 1998. Prediction of Mulitdimensional Criteria: Distinguishing Task and Contextual Performance. Human Performance 11: 305–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hausknecht, John P., Nathan J. Hiller, and Robert J. Vance. 2008. Work-Unit Absenteeism: Effects of Satisfaction, Commitment, Labor Market Conditions, and Time. Academy of Management Journal 51: 1223–45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hemingway, Monica A., and Carlla S. Smith. 1999. Organizational Climate and Occupational Stressors as Predictors of Withdrawal Behaviours and Injuries in Nurses. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 72: 285–99. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Herrmann, Mariesa A., and Jonah E. Rockoff. 2012. Worker Absence and Productivity: Evidence from Teaching. Journal of Labor Economics 30: 749–82. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ichino, Andrea, and Regina T. Riphahn. 2005. The Effect of Employment Protection on Worker Effort: Absenteeism During and After Probation. Journal of the European Economic Association 3: 120–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ivancevich, John M. 1986. Life Events and Hassles as Predictors of Health Symptoms, Job Performance, and Absenteeism. Journal of Organizational Behavior 7: 39–51. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Iverson, Roderick D., and Donna M. Buttigieg. 1999. Affective, Normative and Continuance Commitment: Can the ‘Right Kind’ of Commitment Be Managed? Journal of Management Studies 36: 307–33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Iverson, Roderick D., Mara Olekalns, and Peter J. Erwin. 1998. Affectivity, Organizational Stressors, and Absenteeism: A Causal Model of Burnout and Its Consequences. Journal of Vocational Behavior 52: 1–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Johns, Gary. 1978. Attitudinal and Nonattitudinal Predictors of Two Forms of Absence from Work. Organizational Behavior and Human Performance 22: 431–44. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Johnson, Jonathan L., and Anne M. O’Leary-Kelly. 2003. The Effects of Psychological Contract Breach and Organizational Cynicism: Not All Social Exchange Violations are Created Equal. Journal of Organizational Behavior 24: 627–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Johnson, Michael D., Erica C. Holley, Frederick P. Morgeson, Deborah Labonar, and Adam Stetzer. 2014. Outcomes of Absence Control Initiatives: A Quasi-Experimental Investigation into the Effects of Policy and Perceptions. Journal of Management 40: 1075–97. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Jones, James R., Jinlan Ni, and David C. Wilson. 2009. Comparative Effects of Race/Ethnicity and Employee Engagement on Withdrawal Behavior. Journal of Managerial Issues 21: 195–215. [Google Scholar]
- Judge, Timothy A., and Joseph J. Martocchio. 1996. Dispositional Influences on Attributions Concerning Absenteeism. Journal of Management 22: 837–61. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Jung, Yuhee, and Norihiko Takeuchi. 2010. Performance Implications for the Relationships among Top Management Leadership, Organizational Culture, and Appraisal Practice: Testing Two Theory-Based Models of Organizational Learning Theory in Japan. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 21: 1931–50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kim, Jinhee, and E. Thomas Garman. 2003. Financial Stress and Absenteeism: An Empirically Derived Model. Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning 14: 31–42. [Google Scholar]
- Kolz, Arno R. 1999. Personality Predictors of Retail Employee Theft and Counterproductive Behavior. Journal of Professional Services Marketing 19: 107–14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kopelman, Richard E., and George O. Schneller IV. 1981. A Mixed-Consequence System for Reducing Overtime and Unscheduled Absences. Journal of Organizational Behavior Management 3: 17–28. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Krausz, Moshe, Meni Koslowsky, and Asher Eiser. 1998. Distal and Proximal Influences on Turnover Intentions and Satisfaction: Support for a Withdrawal Progression Theory. Journal of Vocational Behavior 52: 59–71. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kristensen, Kai, Hans Jørn Juhl, Jacob Eskildsen, Jesper Nielsen, Niels Frederiksen, and Carsten Bisgaard. 2006. Determinants of Absenteeism in a Large Danish Bank. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 17: 1645–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Landeweerd, Jan A., and Nicolle P. G. Boumans. 1994. The Effect of Work Dimensions and Need for Autonomy on Nurses’ Work Satisfaction and Health. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 67: 207–17. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Leśniowska, Joanna, Agata Schubert, Michał Wojna, Iwona Skrzekowska-Baran, and Marta Fedyna. 2014. Costs of Diabetes and Its Complications in Poland. The European Journal of Health Economics 15: 653–60. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Løkke, Ann-Kristina, Jacob K. Eskildsen, and Troels Wendelboe Jensen. 2006. Absenteeism in the Nordic Countries. Employee Relations 29: 16–29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Løkke Nielsen, Ann-Kristina. 2008. Determinants of Absenteeism in Public Organizations: A Unit-Level Analysis of Work Absence in a Large Danish Municipality. The International Journal of Human Resource Management 19: 1330–48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- March, James. G., and Herbert Alexander Simon. 1958. Organizations, 2nd ed. New York: Wiley. [Google Scholar]
- Mason, Claire M., and Mark A. Griffin. 2003. Group Absenteeism and Positive Affective Tone: A Longitudinal Study. Journal of Organizational Behavior 24: 667–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Mathis, Robert L., and John H. Jackson. 2004. Human Resource Management, 12th ed. International Student Edition. Mason: Thomson South-Western. [Google Scholar]
- Mchugh, Marie. 2002. The Absence Bug: A Treatable Viral Infection? Journal of Managerial Psychology 17: 722–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Morrow, Paula C., James C. Mcelroy, Kathleen S. Laczniak, and James B. Fenton. 1999. Using Absenteeism and Performance to Predict Employee Turnover: Early Detection through Company Records. Journal of Vocational Behavior 55: 358–74. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Moscarola, Flavia Coda, Elsa Fornero, and Steinar Strøm. 2016. Absenteeism, Childcare and the Effectiveness of Pension Reforms. IZA Journal of European Labor Studies 5: 1–18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Muchinsky, Paul M. 1977. Employee Absenteeism: A Review of the Literature. Journal of Vocational Behavior 10: 316–40. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mukhopadhyay, Tridas, Surendra Rajiv, and Kannan Srinivasan. 1997. Information Technology Impact on Process Output and Quality. Management Science 43: 1645–59. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Nguyen, Helena, Markus Groth, and Anya Johnson. 2016. When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Keep Working: Impact of Emotional Labor on Absenteeism. Journal of Management 42: 615–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Nicholson, Nigel, Paul Jackson, and Gillian Howes. 1978. Shiftwork and Absence: An Analysis of Temporal Trends. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 51: 127–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Nickson, Dennis, Tom Baum, Erwin Losekoot, and Alison Morrison. 2002. Skills, Organisational Performance and Economic Activity in the Hospitality Industry: A Literature Review. Oxford: University of Oxford and Warwick, Economic and Social Research Council Centre for Skills, Knowledge, and Organizational Performance (SKOPE). [Google Scholar]
- Orpen, Christopher. 1979. The Effects of Job Enrichment on Employee Satisfaction, Motivation, Involvement, and Performance: A Field Experiment. Human Relations 32: 189–217. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Parasuraman, Saroj. 1982. Predicting Turnover Intentions and Turnover Behavior: A Multivariate Analysis. Journal of Vocational Behavior 21: 111–21. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Pizam, Abraham, and Steven W. Thornburg. 2000. Absenteeism and Voluntary Turnover in Central Florida Hotels: A Pilot Study. International Journal of Hospitality Management 19: 211–17. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Price, James L. 1998. Estimation of Causal Model of Absenteeism. Indian Journal of Labour Economics 41: 227–46. [Google Scholar]
- Punnett, Betty Jane, Dion Greenidge, and Jase Ramsey. 2007. Job Attitudes and Absenteeism: A Study in the English Speaking Caribbean. Journal of World Business 42: 214–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Qin, Xin, and Yuexin Jiang. 2011. The Impact of Natural Disaster on Absenteeism, Job Satisfaction, and Job Performance of Survival Employees: An Empirical Study of the Survivors in Wenchuan Earthquake. Frontiers of Business Research in China 5: 219–42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Redman, Tom, Peter Hamilton, Hedley Malloch, and Birgit Kleymann. 2011. Working Here Makes Me Sick! The Consequences of Sick Building Syndrome. Human Resource Management Journal 21: 14–27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rentsch, Joan R., and Robert P. Steel. 1998. Testing the Durability of Job Characteristics as Predictors of Absenteeism over a Six-Year Period. Personnel Psychology 51: 165–90. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rhodes, Susan, and Richard Steers. 1981. A Systematic Approach to Diagnosing Employee Absenteeism. Employee Relations 3: 17–22. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Røed, Knut, and Elisabeth Fevang. 2007. Organizational Change, Absenteeism, and Welfare Dependency. Journal of Human Resources 42: 156–93. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rosse, Joseph G., and Charles L. Hulin. 1985. Adaptation to Work: An Analysis of Employee Health, Withdrawal, and Change. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 36: 324–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Saha, Somnath, Sanjay Saint, and Dimitri A. Christakis. 2003. Impact Factor: A Valid Measure of Journal Quality? Journal of the Medical Library Association 91: 42–46. [Google Scholar] [PubMed]
- Saxton, Mary Jane, James S. Phillips, and Roger N. Blakeney. 1991. Antecedents and Consequences of Emotional Exhaustion in the Airline Reservations Service Sector. Human Relations 44: 583–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Schneider, Benjamin, Ellen G. Godfrey, Seth C. Hayes, Mina Huang, Beng-Chong Lim, Lisa Hisae Nishii, Jana L. Raver, and Jonathan C. Ziegert. 2003. The Human Side of Strategy: Employee Experiences of Strategic Alignment in a Service Organization. Organizational Dynamics 32: 122–41. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Scoppa, Vincenzo. 2010. Worker Absenteeism and Incentives: Evidence from Italy. Managerial and Decision Economics 31: 503–15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Somers, Mark John. 1995. Organizational Commitment, Turnover and Absenteeism: An Examination of Direct and Interaction Effects. Journal of Organizational Behavior 16: 49–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Steel, Robert P. 2003. Methodological and Operational Issues in the Construction of Absence Variables. Human Resource Management Review 13: 243–51. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Steel, Robert P., Joan R. Rentsch, and James R. Van Scotter. 2007. Timeframes and Absence Frameworks: A Test of Steers and Rhodes’ (1978) Model of Attendance. Journal of Management 33: 180–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Störmer, Susi, and René Fahr. 2013. Individual Determinants of Work Attendance: Evidence on the Role of Personality. Applied Economics 45: 2863–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tharenou, Phyllis. 1993. A Test of Reciprocal Causality for Absenteeism. Journal of Organizational Behavior 14: 269–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Theorell, Tores, Heinz Leymann, Margareta Jodko, Kristoffer Konarski, and Hans Erik Norbeck. 1994. ‘Person Under Train’ Incidents from the Subway Driver’s Point of View—A Prospective 1-Year Follow-Up Study: The Design, and Medical and Psychiatric Data. Social Science & Medicine 38: 471–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Torre, Edoardo Della, Matteo Pelagatti, and Luca Solari. 2015. Internal and External Equity in Compensation Systems, Organizational Absenteeism and the Role of Explained Inequalities. Human Relations 68: 409–40. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tranfield, David, David Denyer, and Palminder Smart. 2003. Towards a Methodology for Developing Evidence-Informed Management Knowledge by Means of Systematic Review. British Journal of Management 14: 207–22. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Vanden Heuvel, Audrey. 1997. Absence Because of Family Responsibilities: An Examination of Explanatory Factors. Journal of Family and Economic Issues 18: 273–97. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Vistnes, Jessica Primoff. 1997. Gender Differences in Days Lost from Work Due to Illness. ILR Review 50: 304–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wagar, Terry H. 2001. Consequences of Work Force Reduction: Some Employer and Union Evidence. Journal of Labor Research 22: 851–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Waters, L. K., and Darrell Roach. 1979. Job Satisfaction, Behavioral Intention, and Absenteeism as Predictors of Turnover. Personnel Psychology 32: 393–97. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wegge, Jürgen, Klaus-Helmut Schmidt, Carole Parkes, and Rolf Dick. 2007. Taking a Sickie: Job Satisfaction and Job Involvement as Interactive Predictors of Absenteeism in a Public Organization. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 80: 77–89. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Weiner, Nan. 1980. Determinants and Behavioral Consequences of Pay Satisfaction: A Comparison of Two Models. Personnel Psychology 33: 741–57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Winkelmann, Rainer. 1999. Wages, Firm Size and Absenteeism. Applied Economics Letters 6: 337–41. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Yang, Jen-Te. 2010. Antecedents and Consequences of Job Satisfaction in the Hotel Industry. International Journal of Hospitality Management 29: 609–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ybema, Jan F., Peter GW Smulders, and Paulien M. Bongers. 2010. Antecedents and Consequences of Employee Absenteeism: A Longitudinal Perspective on the Role of Job Satisfaction and Burnout. European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology 19: 102–24. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zaccaro, Stephen J., Barbara Craig, and Jeffrey Quinn. 1991. Prior Absenteeism, Supervisory Style, Job Satisfaction, and Personal Characteristics: An Investigation of Some Mediated and Moderated Linkages to Work Absenteeism. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 50: 24–44. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zeytinoglu, Isik, Waheeda Lillevik, Bianca Seaton, and Josefina Moruz. 2004. Part-Time and Casual Work in Retail Trade: Stress and Other Factors Affecting the Workplace. Relations Industrielles/Industrial Relations 59: 516–44. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Zuba, Martin, and Ulrike Schneider. 2013. What Helps Working Informal Caregivers? The Role of Workplace Characteristics in Balancing Work and Adult-Care Responsibilities. Journal of Family and Economic Issues 34: 460–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Authors | Year | Title | Study Design | Study Population | Citations | Determinants and Impact Direction (Negative (−) or Positive (+)) | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(Ahn et al. 2013) | 2013 | Construction Workers’ Perceptions and Attitudes Toward Social Norms as Predictors of Their Absence Behavior | Cross-sectional | Construction site workers in Michigan, US | 12 | social controls (−) awareness of company absence rules (−) | |
(Arai and Thoursie 2005) | 2005 | Incentives and Selection in Cyclical Absenteeism | Longitudinal | Private sector establishments in Sweden | 40 | type of contract (temporary) (−) | |
(Austrom et al. 1988) | 1988 | The Single Worker: An Empirical Exploration of Attitudes, Behavior, and Well-Being | Cross-sectional | Working population, English-speaking adults in Toronto, Canada | 3 | contemporary single persons (not married) (−) | |
(Avery et al. 2012) | 2012 | Is Relational Demography Relative? How Employment Status Influences Effects of Supervisor-Subordinate Demographic Similarity | Cross-sectional | Civilians, wage-earning employees in US | 11 | racioethnic similarity with the supervisor (mediating effect of employment status (part-time job)) (−) gender similarity with the supervisor (mediating effect of employment status (part-time job)) (−) | |
(Bamberger and Biron 2007) | 2007 | Group Norms and Excessive Absenteeism: The Role of Peer Referent Others | Cross-sectional | Production workers employed (for at least a year) at a food manufacturing enterprise in Israel | 61 | permissive referent group absence norms (+) | |
(Barmby et al. 2001) | 2001 | Contracted Workdays and Absence | Cross-sectional | Employees in manufacturing firm operating production lines in UK | 13 | contracted workdays (−) | |
(Bentley et al. 2012) | 2012 | Perceptions of Workplace Bullying in the New Zealand Travel Industry: Prevalence and Management Strategies | Cross-sectional | Employees in retail and business travel agencies and travel wholesale companies in New Zealand | 15 | workplace bullying (+) | |
(Blau 1986) | 1986 | Job Involvement and Organizational Commitment as Interactive Predictors of Tardiness and Absenteeism | Cross-sectional | Staff nurses working in a hospital in the US | 89 | work related attitudes: job involvement and organizational commitment in interaction (−) | |
(Bolin and Heatherly 2001) | 2001 | Predictors of Employee Deviance: The Relationship Between Bad Attitudes and Bad Behavior | Cross-sectional | Entry-level restaurant, supermarket and grocery store employees | 40 | attitude variables (theft approval, intent to quit, and dissatisfaction) (+) | |
(Boon et al. 2014) | 2014 | Perceived Human Resource Management Practices: Their Effect on Employee Absenteeism and Time Allocation at Work | Cross-sectional | Employees of the governmental organization in Netherlands | 5 | job satisfaction (−) employee perception of HRM practices (perceptions of the employment relation bundle) (−) HRM practices (people flow, appraisal and reward, employment relation bundle: mediated through job satisfaction) (−) | |
(Brooke and Price 1989) | 1989 | The Determinants of Employee Absenteeism: An Empirical Test of a Causal Model | Cross-sectional | Full-time employees in Veterans Administration medical centre in the US | 125 | kinship responsibility, organizational permissiveness, role ambiguity and alcohol involvement (+) centralization, pay and job satisfaction (−) | |
(Brown 1999) | 1999 | Worker Absenteeism and Overtime Bans | Longitudinal | Employees of a manufacturing company in Great Britain | 8 | overtime bans (+) gender (female) (+) age (youngest and oldest) (+) previous absence (+) full-time contract (−) wage (−) | |
(Butler et al. 1998) | 1998 | More Than Cost Shifting: Moral Hazard Lowers Productivity | Longitudinal | Manufacturing industries in the US | 11 | medical costs (price of health care) (+) | |
(Byron and Peterson 2002) | 2002 | The Impact of a Large-Scale Traumatic Event on Individual and Organizational Outcomes: Exploring Employee and Company Reactions to 11 September 2001 | Cross-sectional | Full-time employment MPA and MBA students in the US | 40 | strain from an acute-extraorganizational stressor (−) | |
(Carmeli et al. 2007) | 2007 | Considerations in Organizational Career Advancement: What Really Matters | Cross-sectional | Employees working in both service and non-service organizations, operating in the communication, electronics, banking, insurance, car providers, software, and advertisement industries in Israel | 17 | career mobility (+) | |
(Chullen et al. 2010) | 2010 | Minimizing Deviant Behavior in Healthcare Organizations: The Effects of Supportive Leadership and Job Design | Cross-sectional | Employees of a healthcare organization in the US | 12 | perceived organizational support and intrinsic motivation (−) | |
(Chung and Schneider 2002) | 2002 | Serving Multiple Masters: Role Conflict Experienced by Service Employees | Cross-sectional | Telephone service employees in an insurance company in the US | 79 | role conflict (+) | |
(Cohen 1998) | 1998 | An Examination of the Relationship Between Work Commitment and Work Outcomes Among Hospital Nurses | Cross-sectional | Hospital nurses in Canada | 36 | job involvement (−) | |
(Cohen and Golan 2007) | 2007 | Predicting Absenteeism and Turnover Intentions by Past Absenteeism and Work Attitudes: An Empirical Examination of Female Employees in Long Term Nursing Care Facilities | Cross-sectional | Employees of long term nursing care facilities in Israel | 44 | prior absenteeism (+) job satisfaction (−) | |
(Colquitt et al. 2002) | 2002 | Justice in Teams: Antecedents and Consequences of Procedural Justice Climate | Cross-sectional | Employees working in teams in automobile parts manufacturing firm in the US | 322 | climate level (i.e., the average procedural justice perception within the team) (−) | |
(Cornelissen et al. 2013) | 2013 | Fairness Spillovers-The Case of Taxation | Longitudinal | Households in Germany | 5 | self-perceived level of well-being (−) perceived unfairness in taxing the rich (−) tenure (+) firm size (+) | |
(Dasgupta et al. 2012) | 2012 | Impact of Managerial Communication Styles on Employees’ Attitudes and Behaviours | Cross-sectional | Full-time employees in manufacturing organisations in India | 11 | emotional bond with organizations (−) | |
(De Boer et al. 2002) | 2002 | Unfairness at Work as a Predictor of Absenteeism | Cross-sectional | Male employees in a security firm in Belgium | 101 | distributive unfairness (+) procedural unfairness (under the mediating effect of affective commitment) (+) | |
(Deery et al. 1995) | 1995 | The Determinants of Absenteeism: Evidence from Australian Blue-Collar Employees | Cross-sectional | Employees in a motor-vehicle company in Australia | 10 | accumulated sick pay (−) job motivation (−) external responsibilities (greater family and personal obligations) (+) routinization (mediated through job motivation) (+) absence culture (mediated through job motivation) (−) supervisory support (mediated through job motivation) (−) previous disciplinary warnings (−) accumulation of sick pay (−) | |
(Deery and Iverson 2005) | 2005 | Labor-Management Cooperation: Antecedents and Impact on Organizational Performance | Longitudinal | International bank employees in Australia | 56 | union loyalty (−) | |
(Deery et al. 2014) | 2014 | Can Union Voice Make a Difference? The Effect of Union Citizenship Behavior on Employee Absence | Longitudinal | International bank employees in Australia | 4 | union citizenship behavior (helping fellow members with workplace grievances) (−) | |
(Dehue et al. 2012) | 2012 | Coping with Bullying at Work and Health Related Problems | Cross-sectional | Residents who work at least eight hours a week in any organization in the Netherlands where they have both colleagues and a manager | 20 | bullying (+) | |
(Diestel and Schmidt 2012) | 2012 | Lagged Mediator Effects of Self-Control Demands on Psychological Strain and Absenteeism | Longitudinal | Employees in a health insurance company and a financial service institution in Germany | 20 | workload (mediated through self-control demands) (+) | |
(Dionne and Dostie 2007) | 2007 | New Evidence on the Determinants of Absenteeism Using Linked Employer-Employee Data | Longitudinal | Establishments and their workers in Canada | 48 | work arrangements: standard weekday work hours, work-at-home options, and reduced work weeks (−) shift work and compressed work weeks (+) | |
(Drakopoulos and Grimani 2013) | 2013 | Injury-Related Absenteeism and Job Satisfaction: Insights from Greek and UK Data | Cross-sectional | Individuals in Greece and the UK | 3 | job satisfaction (−) | |
(Farrell and Petersen 1984) | 1984 | Commitment, Absenteeism, and Turnover of New Employees: A Longitudinal Study | Longitudinal | Nurses and accountants in the US | 31 | commitment (−) | turnover (+) |
(Festing et al. 1999) | 1999 | Financial Participation in Europe—Determinants and Outcomes | Cross-sectional | HMR managers | 31 | profit sharing (−) | |
(Frick and Malo 2008) | 2008 | Labor Market Institutions and Individual Absenteeism in the European Union: The Relative Importance of Sickness Benefit Systems and Employment Protection Legislation | Cross-sectional | Employees and self-employed | 30 | sickness benefits (+) | |
(Frooman et al. 2012) | 2012 | Transformational and Passive Avoidant Leadership as Determinants of Absenteeism | Cross-sectional | Establishments and their workers in Canada | 3 | to illegitimate: transformational leadership (−) passive avoidant leadership (+) to legitimate: passive avoidant leadership (−) | |
(Fugate et al. 2012) | 2012 | Managing Employee Withdrawal During Organizational Change: The Role of Threat Appraisal | Cross-sectional | Individuals in Greece and the UK | 48 | threat appraisals (+) | |
(Garcia 1987) | 1987 | Sick-Time Usage by Management and Professional Employees in the Public Sector | Cross-sectional | Nurses and accountants in the US | 6 | age (+) gender (woman) (+) race and ethnic (minorities) (+) education (−) marital status (+) tenure (−) job level (−) contact arrangements (flex-time and compressed work weeks vs. fixed schedule) (+) | |
(Garrison and Muchinsky 1977) | 1977 | Attitudinal and Biographical Predictors of Incidental Absenteeism | Cross-sectional | Accounting department employees in the US | 20 | for unpaid absence: satisfaction with work (−) overall job satisfaction (−) age (−) tenure (−) for paid absence: age (+) tenure (+) | |
(Gellatly 1995) | 1995 | Individual and Group Determinants of Employee Absenteeism: Test of a Causal Model | Cross-sectional | Nursing and food services employees in a mid-size chronic care hospital in Canada | 121 | individual and group-level factors: tenure (+) age (−) affective commitment (−) continuous commitment (+) interactional justice (supervisor) (−) perceived absence norm (+) | |
(Gellatly and Luchak 1998) | 1998 | Personal and Organizational Determinants of Perceived Absence Norms | Cross-sectional | Hospital employees in Canada | 6 | perceived absence norms (to future absence) (+) | employees’ normative perceptions (influenced by their prior personal absence and by the average level of absence within both their immediate work group and the absence culture to which they belonged) |
(Gerstenfeld 1969) | 1969 | Employee Absenteeism: New Insights: Data Reveal External Factors | Cross-sectional | Laundry and drycleaning industry employees in the US | 5 | fairness of the immediate supervisor (−) working conditions (−) age (−) child care (−) | |
(Goldberg and Waldman 2000) | 2000 | Modelling Employee Absenteeism: Testing Alternative Measures and Mediated Effects Based on Job Satisfaction | Cross-sectional | Hospital employees in the US | 45 | job satisfaction (unrelated to absenteeism) wage (−) health (−) | |
(Hassan et al. 2014) | 2014 | Does Ethical Leadership Matter in Government? Effects on Organizational Commitment, Absenteeism, and Willingness to Report Ethical Problems | Cross-sectional | Employees of a state government agency in the US | 20 | ethical leadership (−) | |
(Hattrup et al. 1998) | 1998 | Prediction of Multidimensional Criteria: Distinguishing Task and Contextual Performance | Cross-sectional | Entry-level customer service and sales representatives from several stores of a retail chain in Mexico | 62 | conscientiousness (−) | organizational citizenship behavior |
(Hausknecht et al. 2008) | 2008 | Work-Unit Absenteeism: Effects of Satisfaction, Commitment, Labor Market Conditions, and Time | Longitudinal | Employees in a State department of transportation in the US | 59 | shared (group) job satisfaction and organizational commitment in interactions (−) unit-level job satisfaction and organizational commitment (−) | |
(Hemingway and Smith 1999) | 1999 | Organizational Climate and Occupational Stressors as Predictors of Withdrawal Behaviours and Injuries in Nurses | Cross-sectional | Hospital nurses in Canada | 136 | Organizational climate dimensions (have no effect on absenteeism) | |
(Herrmann and Rockoff 2012) | 2012 | Worker Absence and Productivity: Evidence from Teaching | Cross-sectional | Teachers in the US | 14 | productivity (−) | |
(Ichino and Riphahn 2005) | 2005 | The Effect of Employment Protection on Worker Effort: Absenteeism During and After Probation | Longitudinal | Bank employees in Italy | 122 | employment protection (−) | |
(Ivancevich 1986) | 1986 | Life Events and Hassles as Predictors of Health Symptoms, Job Performance, and Absenteeism | Cross-sectional | Assembly line employees from a medium-sized non-union manufacturing corporation in the US | 46 | hassel daily uplifts (−) | |
(Iverson and Buttigieg 1999) | 1999 | Affective, Normative and Continuance Commitment: Can the ‘Right Kind’ of Commitment Be Managed? | Cross-sectional | Fire fighting and rescue service employees in Australia | 135 | affective and normative commitment (−) | |
(Iverson et al. 1998) | 1998 | Affectivity, Organizational Stressors, and Absenteeism: A Causal Model of Burnout and Its Consequences | Cross-sectional | Public hospital employees | 160 | high role stress (+) high personal accomplishment, workload, peer support, co-worker support, personal affectivity, autonomy and supervisory support (−) | |
(Johnson and O’Leary-Kelly 2003) | 2003 | The Effects of Psychological Contract Breach and Organizational Cynicism: Not All Social Exchange Violations are Created Equal | Cross-sectional | Bank employees in the US | 221 | psychological contract breach (+) | |
(Johnson et al. 2014) | 2014 | Outcomes of Absence Control Initiatives: A Quasi-Experimental Investigation into the Effects of Policy and Perceptions | Quasi-experimental (pre-test–post-test without control group) | Employees in two plants of a large unionized automobile parts manufacturer in the US | 5 | absence policy change (−) (for casual absence) (+) (for family and medical leave act absence) | |
(Jones et al. 2009) | 2009 | Comparative Effects of Race/Ethnicity and Employee Engagement on Withdrawal Behavior | Cross-sectional | Employees in the US | 13 | employee engagement (−) | |
(Judge and Martocchio 1996) | 1996 | Dispositional Influences on Attributions Concerning Absenteeism | Mixed method | University employees in the US | 23 | personal illness (+) presence of kinship responsibilities (+) | |
(Jung and Takeuchi 2010) | 2010 | Performance Implications for the Relationships among Top Management Leadership, Organizational Culture, and Appraisal Practice: Testing Two Theory-Based Models of Organizational Learning Theory in Japan | Cross-sectional | SMEs in the manufacturing sector in Japan | 12 | supportive leadership (−) | workforce productivity (−) |
(Kim and Garman 2003) | 2003 | Financial Stress and Absenteeism: An Empirically Derived Model | Quasi-experimental (pre-test–post-test without control group) | White-collar workers of an insurance company in the US | 23 | financial stress (+) | |
(Kolz 1999) | 1999 | Personality Predictors of Retail Employee Theft and Counterproductive Behavior | Quasi-experimental | Employees working for a women’s apparel retailer with several stores in the New York City area in the US | 13 | personality: conscientiousness, agreeableness | |
(Kopelman and Schneller 1981) | 1981 | A Mixed-Consequence System for Reducing Overtime and Unscheduled Absences | Quasi-experimental (pre-test–post-test without control group) | Employees of a 220-bed proprietary medical center in the US | 15 | mixed consequence control system (punishment and rewards) (−) | operational efficiency (−) |
(Krausz et al. 1998) | 1998 | Distal and Proximal Influences on Turnover Intentions and Satisfaction: Support for a Withdrawal Progression Theory | Quasi-experimental (pre-test without control group) | Non-academic employees of a large academic institution in Israel | 20 | satisfaction (−) intention to leave (+) | |
(Kristensen et al. 2006) | 2006 | Determinants of Absenteeism in a Large Danish Bank | Cross-sectional | The study is based on information from approx. 7,000 employees in 500 different bank units in Denmark | 18 | job satisfaction (−) | |
(Landeweerd and Boumans 1994) | 1994 | The Effect of Work Dimensions and Need for Autonomy on Nurses’ Work Satisfaction and Health | Cross-sectional | Nurses in 16 randomly chosen hospitals in the Netherlands | 80 | preference to autonomy (moderating effect of the presence of autonomy) (−) traditional task-oriented nursing care system (moderating effect of the preference for autonomy) (+) | |
(Leśniowska et al. 2014) | 2014 | Costs of Diabetes and Its Complications in Poland | Cross-sectional | Data acquired from the National Health Fund (NFZ), ZUS (Social Insurance Institution), and from GUS (Poland’s Central Statistical Office) in Poland | 14 | diabetes mellitus (dm) (−) | |
(Løkke Nielsen 2008) | 2008 | Determinants of Absenteeism in Public Organizations: A Unit-Level Analysis of Work Absence in a Large Danish Municipality | Cross-sectional | Data from approximately 5,000 employees in 400 departments of day-care centres in Denmark | 12 | age (−) deputy head gender (woman) (−) deputy head’s absence (+) | |
(Mason and Griffin 2003) | 2003 | Group Absenteeism and Positive Affective Tone: A Longitudinal Study | Longitudinal | State government agency employees in Australia | 46 | positive affective tone (−) | |
(Mchugh 2002) | 2002 | The Absence Bug: A Treatable Viral Infection? | Cross-sectional | Employees in local government organisations in Ireland | 10 | organizational health (employee morale, stress level, quality communication processes, satisfaction) (−) | |
(Morrow et al. 1999) | 1999 | Using Absenteeism and Performance to Predict Employee Turnover: Early Detection Through Company Records | Cross-sectional | Data from the personal files of life insurance company employees in the US | 24 | voluntary turnover (+) | |
(Moscarola et al. 2016) | 2016 | Absenteeism, Childcare and the Effectiveness of Pension Reforms | Cross-sectional | Women registered in the private-sector employees’ scheme in Italy | 3 | governmental postponement of retirement and poor supply of childcare services (−) | |
(Mukhopadhyay et al. 1997) | 1997 | Information Technology Impact on Process Output and Quality | Cross-sectional | Data from 46 mail processing centres in the US | 142 | quality and output (−) | |
(Nguyen et al. 2016) | 2016 | When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Keep Working: Impact of Emotional Labor on Absenteeism | Cross-sectional | Public hospital nurses in Australia | 5 | emotional labor: surface acting (+) | |
(Nicholson et al. 1978) | 1978 | Shiftwork and Absence: An Analysis of Temporal Trends | Cross-sectional | 250 male maintenance engineers attached to several production and ancillary departments of a large steelworks in the UK | 18 | shiftwork: shift-turn, days of the week, position in the shift cycle | |
(Orpen 1979) | 1979 | The Effects of Job Enrichment on Employee Satisfaction, Motivation, Involvement, and Performance: A Field Experiment | Quasi-experimental (pre-test-post-test with control group) | Local government agency employees in South Africa | 66 | job enrichment (−) | |
(Parasuraman 1982) | 1982 | Predicting Turnover Intentions and Turnover Behavior: A Multivariate Analysis | Cross-sectional | Non-supervisory plant workers in a mediumsized food processing company in the US | 94 | turnover (+) | |
(Pizam and Thornburg 2000) | 2000 | Absenteeism and Voluntary Turnover in Central Florida Hotels: A Pilot Study | Cross-sectional | Hotel human resources managers in the US | 51 | work-related factors: morale, satisfaction with compensation and benefits, fulfilment of job expectations, level of pay, and training (−) personal characteristics: parenthood status (+) | |
(Price 1998) | 1998 | Estimation of Causal Model of Absenteeism | Cross-sectional | Hospital employees in the US | 6 | kinship responsibility, organizational permissiveness, pay and supervisory support | |
(Punnett et al. 2007) | 2007 | Job Attitudes and Absenteeism: A Study in the English Speaking Caribbean | Cross-sectional | Employees in 5 manufacturing companies in Barbados | 27 | employee’s levels of satisfaction with co-workers, activity, responsibility, and job security, loyalty to the organization | |
(Qin and Jiang 2011) | 2011 | The Impact of Natural Disaster on Absenteeism, Job Satisfaction, and Job Performance of Survival Employees: An Empirical Study of the Survivors in Wenchuan Earthquake | Mixed method | Survival employees of earthquake-affected enterprises in China | 4 | earthquake (−) | |
(Redman et al. 2011) | 2011 | Working Here Makes Me Sick! The Consequences of Sick Building Syndrome | Cross-sectional | Police officers working in air-conditioned buildings in the Caribbean region | 6 | sick building syndrome (+) age (−) | |
(Rentsch and Steel 1998) | 1998 | Testing the Durability of Job Characteristics as Predictors of Absenteeism Over a Six-Year Period | Longitudinal | Civilian employees from a large military organization in the US | 49 | individual job characteristics: skill variety, task identity, autonomy (−) | |
(Røed and Fevang 2007) | 2007 | Organizational Change, Absenteeism, and Welfare Dependency | Longitudinal | Nurses in Norway employed by a municipality or county who did not receive any form of public income support by the end of October 1992 and who were below 53 years of age at that time | 31 | downsizing processes (+) | |
(Rosse and Hulin 1985) | 1985 | Adaptation to Work: An Analysis of Employee Health, Withdrawal, and Change | Longitudinal | Hospital employees in the US | 100 | job satisfaction (−) | |
(Saxton et al. 1991) | 1991 | Antecedents and Consequences of Emotional Exhaustion in the Airline Reservations Service Sector | Cross-sectional | Employees in the reservation department of an airline company in the US | 37 | emotional exhaustion (+) | |
(Scoppa 2010) | 2010 | Worker Absenteeism and Incentives: Evidence from Italy | Cross-sectional | Data from the Bank of Italy Household Survey of about 8,000 households in Italy | 11 | type of employment (self-employed workers vs. employees) public employees vs. private size of the firm (+) threat of unemployment (−) type of contract (temporary contract vs. permanent) tenure (+) | |
(Somers 1995) | 1995 | Organizational Commitment, Turnover and Absenteeism: An Examination of Direct and Interaction Effects | Cross-sectional | Nurses in an urban hospital in the US | 233 | affective commitment (−) continuance commitment and affective commitment (−) | |
(Steel et al. 2007) | 2007 | Timeframes and Absence Frameworks: A Test of Steers and (Rhodes’ 1978) Model of Attendance | Longitudinal | Federal civil service employees in the US | 9 | job satisfaction (−) | |
(Störmer and Fahr 2013) | 2013 | Individual Determinants of Work Attendance: Evidence on the Role of Personality | Longitudinal | Data from the wages of 2004 to 2006 from the German Socio-Economic Panel | 5 | conscientiousness (−) agreeableness (−) neuroticism (+) | |
(Tharenou 1993) | 1993 | A Test of Reciprocal Causality for Absenteeism | Longitudinal | Electrical apprentices in Australia | 60 | for uncertified absence: supervisory style (−) | for uncertified absence: job satisfaction, training achievement, and supervisor-rated performance and attendance (−) |
(Theorell et al. 1994) | 1994 | ‘Person Under Train’ Incidents from the Subway Driver’s Point of View-A Prospective 1-Year Follow-Up Study: The Design, and Medical and Psychiatric Data | Mixed method | Subway drivers in Sweden | 27 | injury (+) | |
(Torre et al. 2015) | 2015 | Internal and External Equity in Compensation Systems, Organizational Absenteeism and the Role of Explained Inequalities | Cross-sectional | Data from an annual labour-market survey conducted by the General Confederation of Italian Industry in 2009 in Italy | 4 | internal pay equity (−) external pay equity (−) (higher at blue-collar workers) | |
(Vanden Heuvel 1997) | 1997 | Absence Because Oof Family Responsibilities: An Examination of Explanatory Factors | Cross-sectional | Employee data collected for the 1992 Australian Dependent Care Study by the Australian Institute of Family Studies in Australia | 18 | job satisfaction (only for men) (−) workplace flexibility (only for woman) (−) child care arrangements (pre-schooler parents) (−) presence of dependent children (−) | |
(Vistnes 1997) | 1997 | Gender Differences in Days Lost from Work Due to Illness | Cross-sectional | Data from the household component of the 1987 National Medical Expenditure Study in the US | 82 | health status (self-reported health status, medical events) (both genders) (+) economic variables (presence of sick leave, private insurance, family income (−) for woman) presence of children under age six (woman) (+) | |
(Wagar 2001) | 2001 | Consequences of Work Force Reduction: Some Employer and Union Evidence | Cross-sectional | Employer and union respondents in Canada | 12 | workforce reduction (+) | |
(Waters and Roach 1979) | 1979 | Job Satisfaction, Behavioral Intention, and Absenteeism as Predictors of Turnover | Longitudinal | Female clerical employees in one section of a regional office of an insurance company in the US | 27 | turnover (+) | |
(Wegge et al. 2007) | 2007 | ‘Taking A Sickie’: Job Satisfaction and Job Involvement as Interactive Predictors of Absenteeism in a Public Organization | Cross-sectional | Employees in a civil service organization of a federal state in Germany | 67 | job involvement and job satisfaction in interactions | |
(Weiner 1980) | 1980 | Determinants and Behavioral Consequences of Pay Satisfaction: A Comparison of Two Models | Cross-sectional | Employees in a medium-sized (350 employees) public-service organization | 56 | pay satisfaction (−) | |
(Winkelmann 1999) | 1999 | Wages, Firm Size and Absenteeism | Longitudinal | Data on German workers for 1985–1988 from the German Socio-Economic Panel | 29 | firm size (mediated with wage) (+) | |
(Yang 2010) | 2010 | Antecedents and Consequences of Job Satisfaction in the Hotel Industry | Cross-sectional | Frontline employees in international tourist hotels in Taiwan | 75 | job satisfaction (−) organizational commitment (−) | |
(Ybema et al. 2010) | 2010 | Antecedents and Consequences of Employee Absenteeism: A Longitudinal Perspective on the Role of Job Satisfaction and Burnout | Longitudinal | Employee data from a cohort study (Study on Musculoskeletal disorders, Absenteeism, Stress and Health) in the Netherlands | 55 | job satisfaction (−) burnout (+) | job satisfaction (+) future absence (+) |
(Zaccaro et al. 1991) | 1991 | Prior Absenteeism, Supervisory Style, Job Satisfaction, and Personal Characteristics: An Investigation of Some Mediated and Moderated Linkages to Work Absenteeism | Cross-sectional | Non-managerial employees of a chemical manufacturing company in the US | 37 | prior absence (+) job satisfaction (−) gender (woman) (+) | |
(Zeytinoglu et al. 2004) | 2004 | Part-Time and Casual Work in Retail Trade: Stress and Other Factors Affecting the Workplace | Cross-sectional | Occupational health and safety representatives and workers in retail trade in Canada | 34 | part-time, casual work, stress (characteristics of and working conditions) (+) | |
(Zuba and Schneider 2013) | 2013 | What Helps Working Informal Caregivers? The Role of Workplace Characteristics in Balancing Work and Adult-Care Responsibilities | Cross-sectional | Workplace-related variables in the fourth European Working Condition Survey | 11 | working contract (flexible) (+) interpersonal relations at work: having good friends at work (+); feeling at home at work (−) family domain stressors: having children, caring for a sick or disabled adult and being married (+) |
© 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Čikeš, V.; Maškarin Ribarić, H.; Črnjar, K. The Determinants and Outcomes of Absence Behavior: A Systematic Literature Review. Soc. Sci. 2018, 7, 120. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci7080120
Čikeš V, Maškarin Ribarić H, Črnjar K. The Determinants and Outcomes of Absence Behavior: A Systematic Literature Review. Social Sciences. 2018; 7(8):120. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci7080120
Chicago/Turabian StyleČikeš, Vedrana, Helga Maškarin Ribarić, and Kristina Črnjar. 2018. "The Determinants and Outcomes of Absence Behavior: A Systematic Literature Review" Social Sciences 7, no. 8: 120. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci7080120
APA StyleČikeš, V., Maškarin Ribarić, H., & Črnjar, K. (2018). The Determinants and Outcomes of Absence Behavior: A Systematic Literature Review. Social Sciences, 7(8), 120. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci7080120