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Measuring Impact of Thriving at Work and Workaholism on Negative Health Behavior of Chinese Teachers: Exploring Moderating Effect of Anxiety

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Objectives: Health behavior of doctors makes direct impact on their capability to serve patients. This study explored factors and the nexus between them that can avoid developing negative health behavior among teachers. It examined the impact of perfectionism, thriving at work, and competitive work environment through mediation of workaholism and moderating effect of anxiety. Method: Quantitative research methodology guided this study. The data was collected from the Chinese teachers through self-administered survey using purposive sampling. Response rate of study was 56.28%. Results: The findings of study shows that perfectionism, thriving at work, and competitive work environment have significant effect on workaholism. Moreover, the results also supported mediating role of workaholism and moderating effect of anxiety in making significant impact on negative health behavior. Conclusion: The findings underscore the vital role of factors like perfectionism, thriving at work, and competitive work environment to develop workaholism and avoid negative health behavior among Chinese teachers.

Keywords: ANXIETY; CHINESE TEACHERS; NEGATIVE HEATH BEHAVIOR; PERFECTIONISM; WORKAHOLISM

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Changchun University of Finance and Economics, Changchun 130122, China 2: Northeast Normal University, Changchun, Jilin 130000, China 3: Jilin City Branch, People’s Bank of China, Changchun 132000, China

Publication date: December 1, 2024

More about this publication?
  • The American Journal of Health Behavior seeks to improve the quality of life through multidisciplinary health efforts in fostering a better understanding of the multidimensional nature of both individuals and social systems as they relate to health behaviors.

    The Journal aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of the impact of personal attributes, personality characteristics, behavior patterns, social structure, and processes on health maintenance, health restoration, and health improvement; to disseminate knowledge of holistic, multidisciplinary approaches to designing and implementing effective health programs; and to showcase health behavior analysis skills that have been proven to affect health improvement and recovery.

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