Unravelling Work Drive: A Comparison between Workaholism and Overcommitment
- PMID: 32784893
- PMCID: PMC7459690
- DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17165755
Unravelling Work Drive: A Comparison between Workaholism and Overcommitment
Abstract
Workaholism and overcommitment are often used as interchangeable constructs describing an individual's over-involvement toward their own job. Employees with high levels in both constructs are characterized by an excessive effort and attachment to their job, with the incapability to detach from it and negative consequences in terms of poor health and job burnout. However, few studies have simultaneously measured both constructs, and their relationships are still not clear. In this study, we try to disentangle workaholism and overcommitment by comparing them with theoretically related contextual and personal antecedents, as well as their health consequences. We conducted a nonprobability mixed mode research design on 133 employees from different organizations in Italy using both self- and other-reported measures. To test our hypothesis that workaholism and overcommitment are related yet different constructs, we used partial correlations and regression analyses. The results confirm that these two constructs are related to each other, but also outline that overcommitment (and not workaholism) is uniquely related to job burnout, so that overcommitment rather than workaholism could represent the true negative aspect of work drive. Additionally, workaholism is more related to conscientiousness than overcommitment, while overcommitment shows a stronger relationship with neuroticism than workaholism. The theoretical implications are discussed.
Keywords: burnout; other-report; overcommitment; personality; workaholism.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
References
-
- Mazzetti G., Vignoli M., Schaufeli W., Guglielmi D. Work addiction and presenteeism: The buffering role of managerial support. Int. J. Psychol. 2019;54:174–179. - PubMed
-
- Huyghebaert T., Fouquereau E., Lahiani F., Beltou N., Gimenes G., Gillet N. Examining the longitudinal effects of workload on ill-being through each dimension of workaholism. Int. J. Stress Manage. 2018;25:144–162. doi: 10.1037/str0000055. - DOI
-
- Clark M.A., Michel J.S., Zhdanova L., Pui S.Y., Baltes B.B. All work and no play? A meta-analytic examination of the correlates and outcomes of workaholism. J. Manag. 2016;42:1836–1873. doi: 10.1177/0149206314522301. - DOI
-
- Schaufeli W.B., Shimazu A., Taris T.W. Being driven to work excessively hard, the evaluation of a two-factor measure of workaholism in the Netherlands and Japan. Cross. Cult. Res. 2009;43:320–348. doi: 10.1177/1069397109337239. - DOI
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources