Work engagement interventions can be effective: A systematic review

Purpose: To synthesise work engagement intervention studies and inform future research by exploring: (1) the types, styles and content of engagement interventions; (2) their effectiveness; and (3) their underlying mechanisms. Methodology: Relevant databases were systematically searched for interv...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Knight, Caroline, Patterson, Malcolm, Dawson, Jeremy
Format: Conference Paper
Published: 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75900
_version_ 1848763578841038848
author Knight, Caroline
Patterson, Malcolm
Dawson, Jeremy
author_facet Knight, Caroline
Patterson, Malcolm
Dawson, Jeremy
author_sort Knight, Caroline
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose: To synthesise work engagement intervention studies and inform future research by exploring: (1) the types, styles and content of engagement interventions; (2) their effectiveness; and (3) their underlying mechanisms. Methodology: Relevant databases were systematically searched for interventions employing a validated engagement measure. 33% of studies were double-coded. Harvest plots informed the development of GRADE evidence statements. Results: The final 40 included studies comprising five types: personal resource building (k=5); job resource building (k=12); leadership training (k=3); health promotion (k=18); job and personal resource building (k=2). Twenty (50%) studies observed significant positive effects on work engagement (Figure 1), two (5%) had a negative effect (Figure 2), and eighteen (45%) had no effect (Figure 3). Resources, demands, and well-being were important mediators. Moderators included intervention type, employee participation, and manager support. Bottom-up interventions, and particularly job crafting and mindfulness interventions, were most successful. Implementation difficulties included poor response and attrition rates, and adverse factors (e.g. organisational restructuring, redundancy, economic downturn). Limitations: Unpublished studies were not included, raising publication bias potential, but increasing the quality of the findings. Potential miss-classification was mitigated by double coding. Research / Practical implications: Future research should assess the active components of interventions, potential mediators (e.g. attention, cognitive reappraisal), and moderators (e.g. personality). Practically, need assessments and senior management support is crucial for success. Value: This is the first narrative systematic review of work engagement interventions. Going beyond effectiveness, this review unpacks how and why interventions work.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:05:42Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-75900
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:05:42Z
publishDate 2019
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-759002019-10-14T06:42:09Z Work engagement interventions can be effective: A systematic review Knight, Caroline Patterson, Malcolm Dawson, Jeremy Purpose: To synthesise work engagement intervention studies and inform future research by exploring: (1) the types, styles and content of engagement interventions; (2) their effectiveness; and (3) their underlying mechanisms. Methodology: Relevant databases were systematically searched for interventions employing a validated engagement measure. 33% of studies were double-coded. Harvest plots informed the development of GRADE evidence statements. Results: The final 40 included studies comprising five types: personal resource building (k=5); job resource building (k=12); leadership training (k=3); health promotion (k=18); job and personal resource building (k=2). Twenty (50%) studies observed significant positive effects on work engagement (Figure 1), two (5%) had a negative effect (Figure 2), and eighteen (45%) had no effect (Figure 3). Resources, demands, and well-being were important mediators. Moderators included intervention type, employee participation, and manager support. Bottom-up interventions, and particularly job crafting and mindfulness interventions, were most successful. Implementation difficulties included poor response and attrition rates, and adverse factors (e.g. organisational restructuring, redundancy, economic downturn). Limitations: Unpublished studies were not included, raising publication bias potential, but increasing the quality of the findings. Potential miss-classification was mitigated by double coding. Research / Practical implications: Future research should assess the active components of interventions, potential mediators (e.g. attention, cognitive reappraisal), and moderators (e.g. personality). Practically, need assessments and senior management support is crucial for success. Value: This is the first narrative systematic review of work engagement interventions. Going beyond effectiveness, this review unpacks how and why interventions work. 2019 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75900 fulltext
spellingShingle Knight, Caroline
Patterson, Malcolm
Dawson, Jeremy
Work engagement interventions can be effective: A systematic review
title Work engagement interventions can be effective: A systematic review
title_full Work engagement interventions can be effective: A systematic review
title_fullStr Work engagement interventions can be effective: A systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Work engagement interventions can be effective: A systematic review
title_short Work engagement interventions can be effective: A systematic review
title_sort work engagement interventions can be effective: a systematic review
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75900