Impact of employee wellness on employee performance in banking industry of West Bengal
DOI
Access Status
This content is available Open Access.
To download content simply use the links provided under the Files section.
More information about licence and terms of use for this content is available in the Rights section.
Loading...
Type
Thesis
Date
Journal Title
Journal Editor
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of North Bengal
Statistics
Total views and downloads
Views
0Downloads
4Impact & Metrics
Authors
Advisor
Editor
Abstract
Organisations were beginning to make the correlation between the vitality of their
staff and their progress as establishments. Happier workplaces emerged from healthier
and more engaged staff members. Also, the more highly engaged teams showed an
increase in profitability by double digits. A holistic perspective on an individual's
health and well-being emerged in the wellness realm, inclusive of physical, mental,
emotional, social and spiritual aspects. This development necessitated better and
preventive strategies of maintaining health within the larger context of wellness. This
realization brought about a massive paradigm shift in organisational strategies that
focused on holistic approaches to employee treatment rather than the erstwhile
satisfaction-based. Since the 1990s, the profound transformation of banks had led to
work-related stress challenging both employees’ performance and mental health,
especially in the banking sector where employee welfare were central to economic
governance. Strategies implemented to aim to balance rapid changes like
liberalization, globalization, and technological advancements with employee wellbeing.
Stress and health issues from these changes emphasized the importance of
workforce wellness, yet addressing mental health problems in the banking industry
was slow. Stress and other health conditions caused by these significant changes had
put a premium on the wellness of the workforce in an age where millions around the
globe were challenged with mental health issues. There had been a widespread
prevalence of mental health problems in the workplace, but head of the institute in the
banking industry was slow to address them. The transformation had led to workrelated
stress challenging both the employees’ performances and mental health. The
understanding of the pervasiveness of mental disorders globally led to the rise in
organisations adopting broad-based employee wellness anchored on motivation and
happiness theories. This study primarily focused on the interplay between Maslow’s
hierarchy of needs and Herzberg’s two-factor model and the exploration of various
dimensions of employee wellness. However, the study also considered the mediating
role of employee mental well-being as a key component of the broader theoretical
framework in the present study. The interplay of financial, social, workplace and
spiritual wellness explained the combined effects of these key contributors on
employee performance through the perspective of the mental well-being of bank
employees. Notably, the direct link between employee well-being was important,
considering the detrimental impacts of poor mental health on productivity and overall
performance. Employers had begun countering this phenomenon by introducing
wellness programs and flexible working hours. Employee wellness was a must-do for
banking's future success in diverse micro and macro environmental challenges that
were constantly evolving. Whenever organisations chose to take care of employees
first, a long-term triumph of those companies in this area was guaranteed because they
created happier employees with lower turnover rates than expected.
Design/Methodology
The study sample consisted of 498 employees with a variety of branches of the bank
in West Bengal, and the research consisted of three phases: to begin with, descriptive
statistical analysis to describe the data in terms of the demographic data, and second,
to identify the research variables/instruments. The third phase was represented by the
testing of the hypotheses and determining the causal relationships. The study applied
a sample based on probability theory to achieve impartiality. For Exploratory Factor
Analysis, a language used for factor analysis, was performed using IBM SPSS to
address the different factors for testing the hypothesis, while the Sobel test was used
to determine the mediation effect. The researchers used structural equation modeling
via SPSS AMOS 22. Hence, EFA and hypothesis testing as the mediator variable
were tested by using the Sobel test.
Findings
The findings emphasised the role of employee mental well-being as a partial mediator
in the connections between financial wellness, social wellness, workplace wellness,
spiritual wellness, and employee performance. Moreover, the study disclosed that all
dimensions of employee wellness demonstrated a causal relationship with the
exogenous variable. These outcomes endorsed incorporating motivation theory with
diverse wellness dimensions, accentuating the significance of positive mental wellbeing
in elucidating the proposed model.
Limitations
Retrieving the truthfulness of the employees’ mental status was strenuous. It was only
restricted to four dimensions of wellness. That was the financial, social, spiritual, and
workplace. The overall understanding of employee wellness did not explicitly reveal
relevant information that necessitates. Therefore, longitudinal research would be
better to establish a more reliable method of measurement. The model could
incorporate moderating factor, showing other factors such as the employee's family
background and gender, which influence mental health. Although limited to a few
districts in West Bengal, the survey also included the majority.
Practical Implications
The recent study contributed significantly to the understanding of employee wellness
in the banking sector. As a result, the causal link between various wellness
dimensions with employee performance and, subsequently, organisational success
was established based on the examined relationship with employee mental well-being.
Moreover, the study showed high significance of mental well-being in employee
focus and performance. The results also proved the suitability of the four-factor
wellness comprising financial, social, spiritual, and workplace directions. The
prevalence of stress and the insufficient availability of immediate solutions for mental
health problems were determined. At the same time, the awareness of the field
supported by actual measures for the banking sector, such as counselling services and
stress management, was indicated. Finally, the study revealed the potential of
employee wellness as the change agent in the respective lifestyle, relying on the
motivation theory to prevent burnout. Hence, the theory had the potential to shift of
focus from reactive to proactive behaviour ensuring the always-motivated employees.
Originality/Value
The proposed model, uniquely integrating employee mental well-being as a mediator
factor, represented an unexplored avenue in prior research. The results proposed a
roadmap with which to tackle the challenge of mental health disorders and could
create opportunities to better employee performance. As such, this model had the
potential to become a key pillar in formulating future Human Resource Bank policies
Description
Citation
Accession No
311899
Call No
TH 331.20413321:D978pi
Book Title
Edition
Volume
ISBN No
Volume Number
Issue Number
ISSN No
eISSN No
Pages
xx, 219p.