Clinical Reflections on Some Models in Absenteeism

Posted: 26 Jun 2015

See all articles by Col Prof Dr Jyotirmaya Satpathy

Col Prof Dr Jyotirmaya Satpathy

Professor, College of Management and Commerce, Srinivas University, Mangaluru, India

Navaneeta Rath

Utkal University - Department of Sociology

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: May 25, 2015

Abstract

Methodological issues raised by distributional characteristics of absenteeism are significant. 'Scientific' studies of human behaviour and interpreting results of such studies have evolved to higher levels of complexity. Traditional narrative review is susceptible on grounds of prejudice. Modeling human interactions is a demanding problem. Traditional narrative review is susceptible on grounds of subjectivity. This paper reviews literature on absenteeism as a form of withdrawal behaviour apart from turnover. Studies examining psychometric properties of absence measures have been reviewed, along with relationship between absenteeism and personal/attitudinal/organisational variables according to unit of analysis. A number of analyses have summarised relationships of absenteeism with variables like 'personal', 'climatic' and attitudinal determinants. Paper concludes with issues for future research that are of both theoretical and practical concern.

Keywords: Neuroeconomic Actors, Psychometric Properties, Personal/Attitudinal/Organisational Variables and Behavioural Actors

Suggested Citation

Satpathy, Col Prof Dr Jyotirmaya and Rath, Navaneeta, Clinical Reflections on Some Models in Absenteeism (May 25, 2015). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2623015

Col Prof Dr Jyotirmaya Satpathy (Contact Author)

Professor, College of Management and Commerce, Srinivas University, Mangaluru, India ( email )

Srinivas University, Mangaluru, India
Srinivas University, Mangaluru, India
Mangaluru
India
7260815968 (Phone)

Navaneeta Rath

Utkal University - Department of Sociology ( email )

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Abstract Views
267
PlumX Metrics