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Workplace Asthma

Asthma self-management at work, asthma morbidity, and the subjective prognosis of gainful employment – the role of work engagement and overcommitment: a cross-sectional study

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, , & ORCID Icon
Pages 719-729 | Received 17 Aug 2020, Accepted 15 Feb 2021, Published online: 15 Mar 2021
 

Abstract

Objective: Work engagement is considered a constructive and satisfying state of mind promoting well-being, whereas overcommitment contributes to ill-health. We investigated if these psychosocial factors are related to asthma self-management at the workplace (i.e. physical activity, trigger avoidance, acute symptom management, communication), asthma control, asthma-specific quality of life, and the subjective prognosis of gainful employment among employees with asthma.

Methods: Questionnaires were distributed in three pulmonary rehabilitation clinics (10/2017-05/2018) in Germany. Work engagement was measured by three items from the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire and overcommitment by six items from the effort-reward imbalance questionnaire. Asthma self-management was mainly assessed by self-developed items, asthma morbidity by the Asthma Control Test and the Marks Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire, and the subjective prognosis of gainful employment by a validated three-item scale. After dichotomization of all variables we ran Poisson regression analyses to calculate multivariable prevalence ratios with 95% confidence intervals.

Results: The sample comprised 221 individuals with asthma. Low work engagement was related to physical inactivity. Low work engagement and high overcommitment were associated with inadequate trigger avoidance and acute symptom management, reduced asthma-specific quality of life, and a poor prognosis of gainful employment. No relationships were observed with communication or asthma control.

Conclusions: Our findings highlight the potential contribution of high levels of work engagement to adequate asthma self-management, good quality of life, and a positive subjective prognosis of gainful employment among employees with asthma. Overcommitment shows associations with those outcomes in the opposite direction, which suggests a detrimental role in asthma.

Acknowledgements

The authors want to thank all participants in this survey. Further, we appreciate Uwe Hofbauer’s support during data entry.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no conflict of interest.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by refonet - Rehabilitation Research Network of the German Pension Fund Rhineland under Grant [number RFN14006].

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