Abstract

With the rapid increase of aging workforces, companies worldwide are concerned with improving the health and working status of older workers. Sense of control is an important psychological variable in sociology but has attracted less attention in studies of occupational health and management. This study examined the association of sense of control with presenteeism among aging workers in the United States. Data from the Health and Retirement Survey were analyzed, specifically, 2308 observations in 2012. Structural equation modeling was used to assess work environment, sense of control (measured in relation to personal mastery and perceived constraints), and associations with presenteeism. The moderating effect of subjective social status on the association between sense of control and presenteeism was examined with a moderated mediation model. In the final structural equation modeling model, work environment was directly inversely associated with presenteeism, and work environment was significantly inversely associated with perceived constraints. There was a direct positive association between work environment and personal mastery, a direct positive association between perceived constraints and presenteeism, and a significant inverse association between personal mastery and presenteeism. The significant indirect effects between work environment and presenteeism were significantly mediated by sense of control. Subjective social status inversely moderated the relation between presenteeism and perceived mastery, a dimension of sense of control. To increase the performance of aging workers in the United States, managers should create a work environment that facilitates access to job resources, as this might improve personal sense of control, particularly among those with high subjective social status.

Highlights

  • To provide empirical evidence on how to inspire the potential of aging workforces, this study investigated the association of sense of control with productivity loss and presenteeism at work among aging workers

  • Persons older than 50 years were recruited by means of multistage sampling for participation in biennial surveys that assess the characteristics of the aging population

  • We investigated several relationships, including the influence of work environment on presenteeism, the mediating effect of the two dimensions of sense of control—personal mastery and perceived constraints—on the relationship between work environment and presenteeism, and the means by which subjective social status moderates the relationship between personal mastery and presenteeism

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Summary

Introduction

The global workforce crisis continues to worsen because of the overall labor shortage attributable to worldwide aging [1,2]. The United States Health and Retirement Survey (HRS) is a highly representative national survey that explores changes in labor force participation and health transitions individuals undergo near and after the end of their work lives. Since its launch in 1992, the study has collected information on income, work, assets, pension plans, health insurance, disability, physical health and. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 245; doi:10.3390/ijerph17010245 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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