Sense of coherence, affective wellbeing and burnout in a higher education institution call centre

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Harry, Nisha

Issue Date

2011-06

Type

Dissertation

Language

en

Keywords

Affective wellbeing , Burnout , Call centre , Sense of coherence , Wellness climate

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

The objective of this study was to: (1) assess the overall wellness climate profile of a sample of higher education call centre employees for national benchmarking purposes; (2) explore the relationship between the participants‟ sense of coherence, affective wellbeing and burnout; and (3) determine how the participants differ regarding these variables in terms of socio-demographic contextual factors such as gender, race, age, and marital status. The South African Employee Health and Wellness Survey was used as a measuring instrument. Compared to the national norm, the results indicated a risky wellness climate reflecting a burnout propensity, lower morale (affective wellbeing) and lower resilience (sense of coherence). Significant relations existed between the participants‟ sense of coherence, affective wellbeing and burnout levels. Significant differences regarding these variables were also detected between males and females and the various marital status groups regarding the participants‟ sense of coherence, affective wellbeing and burnout. The findings of this study contributed new knowledge that may be used to inform employee wellness programmes within a higher education call centre environment. The study concluded with recommendations for future research and practice.

Description

Citation

Nisha, Harry (2011) Sense of coherence, affective wellbeing and burnout in a higher education institution call centre, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/5348>

Publisher

License

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN