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Research Article
Korean translation and validation of the Workplace Positive emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, and Accomplishment (PERMA)-Profiler
Seong Pil Choi, Chunhui Suh, Jae Won Yang, Byung Jin Ye, Chae Kwan Lee, Byung Chul Son, Maro Choi
Ann Occup Environ Med 2019;31:e17.   Published online August 13, 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.35371/aoem.2019.31.e17

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AbstractAbstract PDFPubReaderePub
Background

No tool is available for the multidimensional measurement of workplace well-being among Korean workers. In this study, the Workplace Positive emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, and Accomplishment (PERMA)-Profiler, a multidimensional workplace well-being measure, was translated into Korean, and its validity and reliability were assessed.

Methods

The Workplace PERMA-Profiler, including the positive emotion, engagement, relationships, meaning, and accomplishment domains, was translated according to international guidelines. The questionnaires included the Workplace PERMA-Profiler, Mental Health Continuum-Short Form, Utrecht Work Engagement Scale, Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey, Psychosocial Well-being Index-Short Form, and Korean Occupational Stress Scale-Short Form. A total of 316 Korean workers completed a web-based survey with adequate response. Cronbach's alpha values were calculated to assess scale reliability, and correlational and confirmatory factor analyses were used to assess validity.

Results

Cronbach's alpha values for the Korean Workplace PERMA-Profiler ranged from 0.70 to 0.95. Confirmatory factor analysis indicated that the 5-factor model had a marginally acceptable fit [χ2(80) = 383.04, comparative fit index = 0.909, Tucker-Lewis index = 0.881, root mean square error of approximation = 0.110, and standardized root mean square residual = 0.054]. The 5-factor PERMA domains were correlated positively with work engagement and mental well-being in life, and negatively with burnout, occupational stressors, and stress responses. These results showed that the Workplace PERMA-Profiler has good convergent and divergent validity.

Conclusions

The Korean version of the Workplace PERMA-Profiler had good reliability and validity. It might be used as an indicator or evaluation tool for positive mental health interventions in the workplace.


Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • The validation of Chinese version of workplace PERMA-profiler and the association between workplace well-being and fatigue
    Chen–Cheng Yang, Hsiang-Tai Chen, Kuei-Hau Luo, Kazuhiro Watanabe, Hung-Yi Chuang, Chih-Wei Wu, Chia–Yen Dai, Chao-Hung Kuo, Norito Kawakami
    BMC Public Health.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Psychometric validation of the PERMA-profiler for well-being in Chinese adults
    Yi-Zi Nie, Xu Zhang, Ning-Wei Hong, Chao Zhou, Qian-Qian Huang, Shu-Yan Cao, Chen Wang
    Acta Psychologica.2024; 246: 104248.     CrossRef
  • PERMA to PERMA+4 building blocks of well-being: A systematic review of the empirical literature
    Victoria Cabrera, Stewart I. Donaldson
    The Journal of Positive Psychology.2024; 19(3): 510.     CrossRef
  • Does Changing a Scale’s Context Impact Its Psychometric Properties? A Comparison Using the PERMA-Profiler and the Workplace PERMA-Profiler
    Sean P. M. Rice
    Merits.2024; 4(2): 109.     CrossRef
  • Sources of Joy in Medical Educators as Described by the PERMA Model
    Madeline Lagina, Cyril Grum, Gurjit Sandhu, Allison L. Ruff
    Teaching and Learning in Medicine.2024; 36(1): 53.     CrossRef
  • A study on the construction and validation of pathways to the sustainable well-being of Chinese vocational students in the post-epidemic era
    Jian-Hong Ye, Yu-Tai Wu, Yu-Feng Wu, Mei-Yen Chen, Weiguaju Nong, Yi-Sang Lee
    Current Psychology.2024; 43(8): 7511.     CrossRef
  • The efficacy of employee strengths interventions on desirable workplace outcomes
    Alexandra J. Bratty, Nicole C. Dennis
    Current Psychology.2024; 43(18): 16514.     CrossRef
  • Modifying the PERMA profiler to assess student well-being
    Kah Loong Chue, Amelia Yeo, Youyan Nie, Lee Chin Chew
    Current Psychology.2024; 43(4): 3749.     CrossRef
  • Subjective Representations of the Health of Preschool Teachers
    E.N. Volkova, N.A. Rudnova, A.M. Kalimullin
    Social Psychology and Society.2023; 14(2): 103.     CrossRef
  • Flourishing in the Brazilian context: Evidence of the validity of the PERMA-profiler scale
    Thainá Ferraz de Carvalho, Sibele Dias de Aquino, Jean Carlos Natividade
    Current Psychology.2023; 42(3): 1828.     CrossRef
  • A magyar nyelvű PERMA Jóllét Profil kérdőív megbízhatóságának és érvényességének vizsgálata
    Balázs András Varga, Attila Oláh, András Vargha
    Mentálhigiéné és Pszichoszomatika.2022; 23(1): 33.     CrossRef
  • The Associations Between Job Strain, Workplace PERMA Profiler, and Work Engagement
    Chen-Cheng Yang, Kazuhiro Watanabe, Norito Kawakami
    Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine.2022; 64(5): 409.     CrossRef
  • Factors of Psychological Well-being in Russian Youth
    O.M. Isaeva, A.Y. Akimova, E.N. Volkova
    Psychological Science and Education.2022; 27(4): 24.     CrossRef
  • An Assessment of the Reliability and Validity of the PERMA Well-Being Scale for Adult Undergraduate Students in an Open and Distance Learning Context
    Ishmael Magare, Marien Alet Graham, Irma Eloff
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2022; 19(24): 16886.     CrossRef
  • PERMA-Profiler: the Approbation of the Russian Version
    O.M. Isaeva, A.Y. Akimova, E.N. Volkova
    Social Psychology and Society.2022; 13(3): 116.     CrossRef
  • Toward a More PERMA(nent) Conceptualization of Worker Well-Being?
    William P. Jimenez, Xiaoxiao Hu, Rebecca Garden, Xiaofei Xie
    Journal of Personnel Psychology.2022; 21(2): 94.     CrossRef
  • 451 View
  • 18 Download
  • 18 Web of Science
  • 16 Crossref
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Research Article
Association between work-related health problems and job insecurity in permanent and temporary employees
Won-Wook Lee, Jae-Bum Park, Kyoung-Bok Min, Kyung-Jong Lee, Min-Su Kim
Ann Occup Environ Med 2013;25:15-15.   Published online September 11, 2013
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/2052-4374-25-15
AbstractAbstract PDFPubReaderePub
Objectives

This research was conducted with an aim of determining the correlation between job insecurity and an employee’s work-related health problems among permanent and temporary workers.

Methods

Using the data from the First Korean Working Conditions Survey conducted in 2006, a total of 7,071 workers, excluding employers and the self-employed, were analyzed. Work-related health problems were categorized as backache, headache, abdominal pain, muscular pain, stress, fatigue, insomnia, anxiety or depression. Each problem was then analyzed for its relationship to job insecurity through logistic regression analysis.

Results

Among the 7,071 workers, 5,294 (74.9%) were permanent workers and 1,777 (25.1%) were temporary workers. For the permanent workers, presence of high or moderate job insecurity appeared more closely linked to backache, headache, abdominal pain, muscular pain, stress, fatigue, insomnia, anxiety, and depression compared to absence of job insecurity. However, for the temporary workers, only depression appeared to be associated with the presence of high job insecurity.

Conclusion

The study showed that the presence of job insecurity is correlated with work-related health problems. The deleterious effects of job insecurity appeared to be stronger in permanent than temporary workers. Additional research should investigate ways to effectively reduce job insecurity.


Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Sociodemographic Factors, Health-Risk Behaviors, and Chronic Conditions Are Associated with a High Prevalence of Depressive Symptoms: Findings from the Indonesian Family Life Survey-5
    Mohammed Alfaqeeh, Sofa D. Alfian, Rizky Abdulah
    Behavioral Medicine.2024; : 1.     CrossRef
  • Psychosocial risk factors for low back pain in US workers: Data from the 2002–2018 quality of work life survey
    Haiou Yang, Ming‐Lun Lu, Scott Haldeman, Naomi Swanson
    American Journal of Industrial Medicine.2023; 66(1): 41.     CrossRef
  • Factors associated with mental health of internal migrants (Kayayei) in Agbogbloshie-Ghana
    Joyce komesuor, Anna Meyer-Weitz
    BMC Women's Health.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Work-related stress and associated factors among employees of Hawassa industrial park, southern Ethiopia: an institutional based cross-sectional study
    Yohanes Sime, Hailemariam Hailesilassie, Arefayne Alenko
    BMC Psychiatry.2022;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The Perceived Risk of Being Infected with COVID-19 at Work, Communication, and Employee Health: A Longitudinal Application of the Job Demands–Resources Model
    Alessandra Falco, Damiano Girardi, Alessandro De Carlo, Elvira Arcucci, Laura Dal Corso
    Sustainability.2022; 14(2): 1037.     CrossRef
  • Prevalence and Associated Factors of the Severity of Depression, Anxiety and Stress Among Low-Income Community-Dwelling Adults in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
    Halyna Lugova, Jo Ann Andoy-Galvan, Sapna S. Patil, Yin How Wong, Gul M. Baloch, Adlina Suleiman, Rusli Nordin, Karuthan Chinna
    Community Mental Health Journal.2021; 57(8): 1489.     CrossRef
  • ‘I am Still Able to Contribute to Someone Less Fortunate’: A Phenomenological Analysis of Young Adults’ Process of Personal Healing from Major Depression
    Siaw Leng Chan, Poh Li Lau, Y. Joel Wong
    International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling.2020; 42(1): 97.     CrossRef
  • Bullying in Korean hotel restaurant kitchens: why is everybody always picking on me?
    Ki Ho Kim, Eugene Y. Roh, Young Joong Kim, Samuel A. Spralls
    Employee Relations: The International Journal.2020; 43(1): 337.     CrossRef
  • Prevalence of musculoskeletal disorders in firefighters and its association with insomnia
    Mahnaz Abbasi, Shabnam Jalilolghadr, Mahdi Soltanabadi, Zohreh Yazdi
    Policy and Practice in Health and Safety.2020; 18(1): 34.     CrossRef
  • Associations between cognitive and affective job insecurity and incident purchase of psychotropic drugs: A prospective cohort study of Swedish employees
    Sandra Blomqvist, Tianwei Xu, Paraskevi Persitera, Lena Låstad, Linda L. Magnusson Hanson
    Journal of Affective Disorders.2020; 266: 215.     CrossRef
  • Prevalence and associated factors of musculoskeletal disorders among Chinese healthcare professionals working in tertiary hospitals: a cross-sectional study
    Hongyun Dong, Qiong Zhang, Guangzeng Liu, Tingguo Shao, Yingzhi Xu
    BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders.2019;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Sleep problems among Chinese clinical nurses working in general hospitals
    H Dong, Q Zhang, Z Sun, F Sang, Y Xu
    Occupational Medicine.2017; 67(7): 534.     CrossRef
  • Psychotropic Drug Consumption and Employment Status in Time of Economic Crisis (2007–2011)
    Cesare Maria Cornaggia, Massimiliano Beghi, Mario Mezzanzanica, Gloria Ronzoni, Giorgio Vittadini, Walter Maffenini
    Psychiatric Quarterly.2017; 88(2): 371.     CrossRef
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    Hongyun Dong, Qiong Zhang, Zihua Sun, Fengxin Sang, Yingzhi Xu
    BMC Psychiatry.2017;[Epub]     CrossRef
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    Yeongmi Ha, Hyunju Park
    Korean Journal of Occupational Health Nursing.2016; 25(4): 329.     CrossRef
  • Is the worsening of psychosocial exposures associated with mental health? Comparing two population‐based cross‐sectional studies in Spain, 2005–2010
    Mireia Utzet, Albert Navarro, Clara Llorens, Carles Muntaner, Salvador Moncada
    American Journal of Industrial Medicine.2016; 59(5): 399.     CrossRef
  • Job insecurity is associated with adult asthma in Germany during Europe's recent economic crisis: a prospective cohort study
    Adrian Loerbroks, Jos A Bosch, Jeroen Douwes, Peter Angerer, Jian Li
    Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.2014; 68(12): 1196.     CrossRef
  • 189 View
  • 0 Download
  • 20 Web of Science
  • 17 Crossref
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