Work-family conflict and job burnout among correctional staff.

Eric G Lambert, Nancy L Hogan
Author Information
  1. Eric G Lambert: Department of Criminal Justice, Wayne State University, USA.

Abstract

Work-family conflict and job burnout are both issues for 272 correctional staff (response rate of 68%). The two major forms of work-family conflict are work-on-family conflict and family-on-work conflict. Multivariate analysis of survey data from 272 correctional staff at a state prison indicated work-on-family conflict had a significant positive relation with job burnout, while family-on-work conflict did not.

MeSH Term

Adult
Burnout, Professional
Conflict, Psychological
Family
Female
Frustration
Health Surveys
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Prisons
Problem Solving
Work

Word Cloud

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