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Health behaviours and affective states of partners of fly‐in fly‐out workers: a daily diary study

Health behaviours and affective states of partners of fly‐in fly‐out workers: a daily diary study
Health behaviours and affective states of partners of fly‐in fly‐out workers: a daily diary study
Partners of fly-in fly-out (FIFO) workers face increases in demands, for instance in care and family responsibilities, particularly in the absence of workers; however, little is known about how their daily life experiences influence their health across the FIFO work cycle. This study examined the within-person effects of workload, job control and social support on affective states and health behaviours of partners of FIFO workers. Forty-four (N = 44) partners of FIFO workers completed online diary surveys on affective states and health behaviours once a day for 28 consecutive days during on-and off-shift periods of the FIFO worker. Multilevel models were used to analyse day-level data. The results of the study demonstrated significant differences in partners' depressed affect and alcohol consumption during both on- and off-shift periods of FIFO workers. Daily increases in workload were associated with anxious affect, whereas daily increases in job control and social support were associated with low depressed affect and positive affect in partners of FIFO workers. Daily increase in social support was also found to be associated with an increase in daily alcohol intake. Interventions could support partners in managing the daily workload and encouraging the creation of social support networks in partners of FIFO workers.
0157-6321
1191-1215
Asiamah‐Asare, Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah
83c97433-b568-48a9-a12f-ebc04f9708f3
Robinson, Suzanne
381aa349-a158-4001-86e8-20327d1b300d
Kwasnicka, Dominika
967b4afc-0d59-467f-aa76-44cc15011f4c
Powell, Daniel
e1e53a46-a37b-425b-ac15-e82f99033f46
Asiamah‐Asare, Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah
83c97433-b568-48a9-a12f-ebc04f9708f3
Robinson, Suzanne
381aa349-a158-4001-86e8-20327d1b300d
Kwasnicka, Dominika
967b4afc-0d59-467f-aa76-44cc15011f4c
Powell, Daniel
e1e53a46-a37b-425b-ac15-e82f99033f46

Asiamah‐Asare, Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah, Robinson, Suzanne, Kwasnicka, Dominika and Powell, Daniel (2025) Health behaviours and affective states of partners of fly‐in fly‐out workers: a daily diary study. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 60 (4), 1191-1215. (doi:10.1002/ajs4.370).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Partners of fly-in fly-out (FIFO) workers face increases in demands, for instance in care and family responsibilities, particularly in the absence of workers; however, little is known about how their daily life experiences influence their health across the FIFO work cycle. This study examined the within-person effects of workload, job control and social support on affective states and health behaviours of partners of FIFO workers. Forty-four (N = 44) partners of FIFO workers completed online diary surveys on affective states and health behaviours once a day for 28 consecutive days during on-and off-shift periods of the FIFO worker. Multilevel models were used to analyse day-level data. The results of the study demonstrated significant differences in partners' depressed affect and alcohol consumption during both on- and off-shift periods of FIFO workers. Daily increases in workload were associated with anxious affect, whereas daily increases in job control and social support were associated with low depressed affect and positive affect in partners of FIFO workers. Daily increase in social support was also found to be associated with an increase in daily alcohol intake. Interventions could support partners in managing the daily workload and encouraging the creation of social support networks in partners of FIFO workers.

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Aust J Social Issues - 2024 - Asiamah‐Asare - Health behaviours and affective states of partners of fly‐in fly‐out workers - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 2 September 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 October 2024
Published date: 9 December 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511424
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511424
ISSN: 0157-6321
PURE UUID: 713fcf06-69fa-4193-985f-c5827142f593
ORCID for Daniel Powell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4995-6057

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Date deposited: 14 May 2026 16:36
Last modified: 15 May 2026 02:15

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Contributors

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

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