The contribution of email volume, email management strategies and propensity to worry in predicting email stress among academics
Access Status
Authors
Date
2013Type
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Source Title
ISSN
Collection
Abstract
The present study explored the contribution of email volume, email management and worry in predicting email stress among a sample of Australian academics. The sample comprised 114 academic staff from Curtin University in Perth, Australia. An online survey was conducted to gather data on the target variables. A moderated hierarchical regression indicated that the combined model accounted for a significant 11.90% of the variance in email stress (p = .008, f2 = .135). Worry individually accounted for a significant proportion of the variance (p = .010, f2 = .06, 95% CI [.028, .202]). Email volume also significantly predicted email stress (p = .00, f2 = .057, 95% CI [.011, .079]). Email management did not moderate the email volume and stress relationship. The findings suggest that email stress is impacting upon academic teaching staff and that research on mitigating this stress needs to be undertaken.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Kozyrskyj, A.; Kendall, Garth; Zubrick, Stephen; Newnham, J.; Sly, Peter (2009)Frequent nocturnal awakening in early life is associated with nonatopic asthma in children Holdings more options Author(s): Kozyrskyj AL (Kozyrskyj, A. L.)1,2, Kendall GE (Kendall, G. E.)3,4,6, Zubrick SR ...
-
Commons, D.; Greenwood, K.; Anderson, Rebecca (2015)Background: Worry about physical health is broadly referred to as health anxiety and can range from mild concern to severe or persistent anxiety such as that found in DSM-IV hypochondriasis. While much is known about ...
-
Pingault, N.; Lehmann, Deborah; Bowman, J.; Riley, T. (2007)* Skip to main content Blackwell Synergy Email: ? Password: University of Western Australia Library * Register * Forgotten Password * Athens/Institution Login * Synergy Home | * ...