Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia

Although many studies have shown the importance of work-life balance and social connectedness in relation to mental health, poor work-life balance is still one of the major issues imSacWing Woda\¶V ZoUking SoSXlation in Malaysia. There had been no research carried out on social connectedness as the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ling, Esther, Ngoo, Ee Ling, Tan, Sin Yuan
Format: Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utar.edu.my/4347/
http://eprints.utar.edu.my/4347/1/FYP_PY_EL_2021.pdf
_version_ 1848886131855196160
author Ling, Esther
Ngoo, Ee Ling
Tan, Sin Yuan
author_facet Ling, Esther
Ngoo, Ee Ling
Tan, Sin Yuan
author_sort Ling, Esther
building UTAR Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Although many studies have shown the importance of work-life balance and social connectedness in relation to mental health, poor work-life balance is still one of the major issues imSacWing Woda\¶V ZoUking SoSXlation in Malaysia. There had been no research carried out on social connectedness as the mediator between this association. Correspondingly, this study examines the impacts of work-life balance and social connectedness on mental health problems and on social connectedness as the mediator among working adults in Malaysia. A total of 186 working adults were recruited across Malaysia through an online survey in a cross-sectional design. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that both work-life balance (ȕ = -.193, t(183) = -2.94, p = .004) and social connectedness (ȕ = -.409, t(183) = -6.22, p < .001) significantly predicted the level of mental health problems among working adults. Social connectedness was found to be the strongest predictor. Process SPSS macro analysis indicated that social connectedness significantly mediated the relationship between work-life balance and level of mental health problems (B = -.199, SE = .103, 95% CI [-.425, -021]). These findings are helpful in increasing the awareness of government and human resource management (HRM) to implement policies which facilitates work-life balance and social life, as well as for mental health practitioners in providing them insight for formulating better treatment plans that encourage social connections.
first_indexed 2025-11-15T19:33:37Z
format Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis
id utar-4347
institution Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-15T19:33:37Z
publishDate 2021
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling utar-43472022-10-17T13:56:53Z Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia Ling, Esther Ngoo, Ee Ling Tan, Sin Yuan BF Psychology HM Sociology Although many studies have shown the importance of work-life balance and social connectedness in relation to mental health, poor work-life balance is still one of the major issues imSacWing Woda\¶V ZoUking SoSXlation in Malaysia. There had been no research carried out on social connectedness as the mediator between this association. Correspondingly, this study examines the impacts of work-life balance and social connectedness on mental health problems and on social connectedness as the mediator among working adults in Malaysia. A total of 186 working adults were recruited across Malaysia through an online survey in a cross-sectional design. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that both work-life balance (ȕ = -.193, t(183) = -2.94, p = .004) and social connectedness (ȕ = -.409, t(183) = -6.22, p < .001) significantly predicted the level of mental health problems among working adults. Social connectedness was found to be the strongest predictor. Process SPSS macro analysis indicated that social connectedness significantly mediated the relationship between work-life balance and level of mental health problems (B = -.199, SE = .103, 95% CI [-.425, -021]). These findings are helpful in increasing the awareness of government and human resource management (HRM) to implement policies which facilitates work-life balance and social life, as well as for mental health practitioners in providing them insight for formulating better treatment plans that encourage social connections. 2021-03-29 Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://eprints.utar.edu.my/4347/1/FYP_PY_EL_2021.pdf Ling, Esther and Ngoo, Ee Ling and Tan, Sin Yuan (2021) Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia. Final Year Project, UTAR. http://eprints.utar.edu.my/4347/
spellingShingle BF Psychology
HM Sociology
Ling, Esther
Ngoo, Ee Ling
Tan, Sin Yuan
Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia
title Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia
title_full Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia
title_fullStr Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia
title_short Work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in Malaysia
title_sort work-life balance, social connectedness and mental health among working adults in malaysia
topic BF Psychology
HM Sociology
url http://eprints.utar.edu.my/4347/
http://eprints.utar.edu.my/4347/1/FYP_PY_EL_2021.pdf