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Are individual or work-related factors associated with work outcomes in menopausal women?

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

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Are individual or work-related factors associated with work outcomes in menopausal women? / Griffiths, Amanda; Hardy, Claire; Maclennan, Sarah et al.
2017. Paper presented at 11th European Congress on Menopause & Andropause.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Griffiths, A, Hardy, C, Maclennan, S & Hunter, MS 2017, 'Are individual or work-related factors associated with work outcomes in menopausal women?', Paper presented at 11th European Congress on Menopause & Andropause, 22/05/17 - 24/05/17. <https://www.maturitas.org/article/S0378-5122(17)30392-4/abstract>

APA

Griffiths, A., Hardy, C., Maclennan, S., & Hunter, M. S. (2017). Are individual or work-related factors associated with work outcomes in menopausal women?. Paper presented at 11th European Congress on Menopause & Andropause. https://www.maturitas.org/article/S0378-5122(17)30392-4/abstract

Vancouver

Griffiths A, Hardy C, Maclennan S, Hunter MS. Are individual or work-related factors associated with work outcomes in menopausal women?. 2017. Paper presented at 11th European Congress on Menopause & Andropause.

Author

Griffiths, Amanda ; Hardy, Claire ; Maclennan, Sarah et al. / Are individual or work-related factors associated with work outcomes in menopausal women?. Paper presented at 11th European Congress on Menopause & Andropause.

Bibtex

@conference{185268cc65254d7290068688b2522f3a,
title = "Are individual or work-related factors associated with work outcomes in menopausal women?",
abstract = "Many women are now in employment during their menopause. Evidence suggests that although most women do not take absence or perceive their job performance to be affected by their menopause, some women do. It is therefore important to understand what factors might be associated with such outcomes. This paper explores individual and work-related factors and their associations with menopause-related work absence and perceived work performance impact. 896 menopausal, working women from 10 organisations completed an electronic survey. Data included individual-related factors (sociodemographic: age, education level, dependents, level of physical activity, psychological distress; menopausal symptoms: perceived bothersomeness, duration and frequency of hot flushes), work-related factors (physical and psychosocial work environment, line manager factors: age, gender, symptom disclosure; and job satisfaction), menopause-related absence and self-perceived job performance impairment (dependent variables). Univariate and multivariate logistic and linear regression analyses were performed to examine the extent these variables significantly predicted the dependent variables of interest. Results showed the factors significantly associated with menopause-related absence were largely work-related than individual-related (accounting for 35% and 13% of variance respectively). In contrast, the factors that predicted performance detriments were largely individual-related rather than work-related (accounting for 16% and 19% of variance respectively). These findings suggest that both individual and work-related factors may be associated with work outcomes and that researchers, employers and policy makers should take a multi-perspective approach. This may be more effective in helping those women who find menopausal transition impacts negatively on their working life.",
author = "Amanda Griffiths and Claire Hardy and Sarah Maclennan and Hunter, {Myra S.}",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
day = "1",
language = "English",
note = "11th European Congress on Menopause &amp; Andropause ; Conference date: 22-05-2017 Through 24-05-2017",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Are individual or work-related factors associated with work outcomes in menopausal women?

AU - Griffiths, Amanda

AU - Hardy, Claire

AU - Maclennan, Sarah

AU - Hunter, Myra S.

PY - 2017/6/1

Y1 - 2017/6/1

N2 - Many women are now in employment during their menopause. Evidence suggests that although most women do not take absence or perceive their job performance to be affected by their menopause, some women do. It is therefore important to understand what factors might be associated with such outcomes. This paper explores individual and work-related factors and their associations with menopause-related work absence and perceived work performance impact. 896 menopausal, working women from 10 organisations completed an electronic survey. Data included individual-related factors (sociodemographic: age, education level, dependents, level of physical activity, psychological distress; menopausal symptoms: perceived bothersomeness, duration and frequency of hot flushes), work-related factors (physical and psychosocial work environment, line manager factors: age, gender, symptom disclosure; and job satisfaction), menopause-related absence and self-perceived job performance impairment (dependent variables). Univariate and multivariate logistic and linear regression analyses were performed to examine the extent these variables significantly predicted the dependent variables of interest. Results showed the factors significantly associated with menopause-related absence were largely work-related than individual-related (accounting for 35% and 13% of variance respectively). In contrast, the factors that predicted performance detriments were largely individual-related rather than work-related (accounting for 16% and 19% of variance respectively). These findings suggest that both individual and work-related factors may be associated with work outcomes and that researchers, employers and policy makers should take a multi-perspective approach. This may be more effective in helping those women who find menopausal transition impacts negatively on their working life.

AB - Many women are now in employment during their menopause. Evidence suggests that although most women do not take absence or perceive their job performance to be affected by their menopause, some women do. It is therefore important to understand what factors might be associated with such outcomes. This paper explores individual and work-related factors and their associations with menopause-related work absence and perceived work performance impact. 896 menopausal, working women from 10 organisations completed an electronic survey. Data included individual-related factors (sociodemographic: age, education level, dependents, level of physical activity, psychological distress; menopausal symptoms: perceived bothersomeness, duration and frequency of hot flushes), work-related factors (physical and psychosocial work environment, line manager factors: age, gender, symptom disclosure; and job satisfaction), menopause-related absence and self-perceived job performance impairment (dependent variables). Univariate and multivariate logistic and linear regression analyses were performed to examine the extent these variables significantly predicted the dependent variables of interest. Results showed the factors significantly associated with menopause-related absence were largely work-related than individual-related (accounting for 35% and 13% of variance respectively). In contrast, the factors that predicted performance detriments were largely individual-related rather than work-related (accounting for 16% and 19% of variance respectively). These findings suggest that both individual and work-related factors may be associated with work outcomes and that researchers, employers and policy makers should take a multi-perspective approach. This may be more effective in helping those women who find menopausal transition impacts negatively on their working life.

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - 11th European Congress on Menopause &amp; Andropause

Y2 - 22 May 2017 through 24 May 2017

ER -