Publications

Employment quality, health and job satisfaction

In a new article in Social Science & Medicine, Karen Van Aerden, Vanessa Puig-Barrachina, Kim Bosmans and Christophe Vanroelen look at how employment quality relates to health and job satisfaction in Europe.

Abstract:

The changing nature of employment in recent decades, due to an increased emphasis on flexibility and competitiveness in European labour markets, compels the need to assess the consequences of contemporary employment situations for workers. This article aims to study the relation between the quality of employment and the health and well-being of European workers, using data from the 2010 European Working Conditions Survey. A typology of employment arrangements, mapping out employment quality in the European labour force, is constructed by means of a Latent Class Cluster Analysis. This innovative approach shows that it is possible to condense multiple factors characterising the employment situation into five job types: Standard Employment Relationship-like (SER-like), instrumental, precarious unsustainable, precarious intensive and portfolio jobs. Binary logistic regression analyses show that, controlling for other work quality characteristics, this employment quality typology is related to self-perceived job satisfaction, general health and mental health. Precarious intensive jobs are associated with the worst and SER-like jobs with the best health and well-being situation. The findings presented in this study indicate that, among European wage workers, flexible and de-standardised employment tends to be related to lower job satisfaction, general health and mental health. The quality of employment is thus identified as an important social determinant of health (inequalities) in Europe.

Keywords:

  • Employment quality;
  • Employment conditions;
  • Employment relations;
  • Job satisfaction;
  • General health;
  • Mental health;
  • Latent Class Cluster Analysis;
  • EU27

DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.04.017