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Impact of fly-in fly-out work on health behaviours and affective states: a daily diary study

Impact of fly-in fly-out work on health behaviours and affective states: a daily diary study
Impact of fly-in fly-out work on health behaviours and affective states: a daily diary study
Our knowledge about the role of fly-in fly-out (FIFO) work-related factors on the well-being of workers across the FIFO work cycle is limited. This study examined the within-person effects of job demand and control on psychological states and health behaviours. The study employed a daily diary design, with 23 FIFO workers in the Australian mining industry completing a daily diary survey for 28 consecutive days across on-shift and off-shift periods. Multilevel analyses showed FIFO workers experienced higher positive affect and enjoyed better sleep quality, but consumed more alcohol, during off-shift days as compared to on-shift days. Within-person variability in daily demand (workload) was associated with higher anxious affect, whereas job control predicted lower anxious and depressed affects, higher positive affect, more alcohol consumption, and more physical activity. The within-person effect of demand on anxious affect was moderated by job control such that those who generally had more control over their jobs had a smaller effect of demand on anxiety than those with less control. Results suggest potentially modifiable aspects of FIFO work—particularly job control—may help alleviate the impact of workload on poorer health behaviours and mood.
1532-3005
Asiamah-Asare, Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah
83c97433-b568-48a9-a12f-ebc04f9708f3
Robinson, Suzanne
381aa349-a158-4001-86e8-20327d1b300d
Powell, Daniel
e1e53a46-a37b-425b-ac15-e82f99033f46
Kwasnicka, Dominika
967b4afc-0d59-467f-aa76-44cc15011f4c
Asiamah-Asare, Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah
83c97433-b568-48a9-a12f-ebc04f9708f3
Robinson, Suzanne
381aa349-a158-4001-86e8-20327d1b300d
Powell, Daniel
e1e53a46-a37b-425b-ac15-e82f99033f46
Kwasnicka, Dominika
967b4afc-0d59-467f-aa76-44cc15011f4c

Asiamah-Asare, Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah, Robinson, Suzanne, Powell, Daniel and Kwasnicka, Dominika (2024) Impact of fly-in fly-out work on health behaviours and affective states: a daily diary study. Stress and Health, 40 (3), [e3361]. (doi:10.1002/smi.3361).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Our knowledge about the role of fly-in fly-out (FIFO) work-related factors on the well-being of workers across the FIFO work cycle is limited. This study examined the within-person effects of job demand and control on psychological states and health behaviours. The study employed a daily diary design, with 23 FIFO workers in the Australian mining industry completing a daily diary survey for 28 consecutive days across on-shift and off-shift periods. Multilevel analyses showed FIFO workers experienced higher positive affect and enjoyed better sleep quality, but consumed more alcohol, during off-shift days as compared to on-shift days. Within-person variability in daily demand (workload) was associated with higher anxious affect, whereas job control predicted lower anxious and depressed affects, higher positive affect, more alcohol consumption, and more physical activity. The within-person effect of demand on anxious affect was moderated by job control such that those who generally had more control over their jobs had a smaller effect of demand on anxiety than those with less control. Results suggest potentially modifiable aspects of FIFO work—particularly job control—may help alleviate the impact of workload on poorer health behaviours and mood.

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Stress and Health - 2023 - Asiamah‐Asare - Impact of fly‐in fly‐out work on health behaviours and affective states A daily - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 December 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 December 2023
Published date: 11 June 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 510895
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510895
ISSN: 1532-3005
PURE UUID: 2c27f1fe-c299-4297-8124-58464f699bc9
ORCID for Daniel Powell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4995-6057

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Date deposited: 24 Apr 2026 16:37
Last modified: 25 Apr 2026 04:21

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Contributors

Author: Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah Asiamah-Asare
Author: Suzanne Robinson
Author: Daniel Powell ORCID iD
Author: Dominika Kwasnicka

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