This review aimed to explore the initiatives, interventions, and experiments implemented by employing
organizations and designed to support the work-life reconciliation at workplaces, and the
effects of these actions on employees? well-being at work.
A systematic literature review was conducted on the basis of a search in PsycInfo, ERIC, and the ISI
Web of Science database of Social Sciences between January 2000 and May 2015. Those studies
were included in which either organizational or individual-level initiatives, interventions, or experiments
were implemented by employers at workplaces in order to promote the work-life reconciliation
of their employees. Work-life reconciliation was considered to encompass all life domains and
all career stages from early to the end of working career.
The content analysis of 11 studies showed that effective employer actions focused on working
time, care arrangements, and training for supervisors and employees. Flexibility, in terms of both
working time and other arrangements provided for employees, and support from supervisors decreased
work-family conflict, improved physical health and job satisfaction, and also reduced the
number of absence days and turnover intentions.
Overall, very few intervention studies exist investigating the effects of employer-induced work-life
initiatives. One should particularly note the conditions under which interventions are most successful,
since many contextual and individual-level factors influence the effects of organizational
initiatives on employee and organizational outcomes.
Author Biographies
Annina Ropponen, Finnish Institute of Occupational Health
Adjunct Professor
Marja K?ns?l?, Finnish Institute of Occupational Health
PhD
Johanna Rantanen, Department of Teacher Education, University of Jyvaskyla
Adjunct Professor
Salla Toppinen-Tanner, Finnish Institute of Occupational Health