Akademiai Kiado Zrt.
The International Work Addiction Scale (IWAS): A screening tool for clinical and organizational applications validated in 85 cultures from six continents
Nicolas Gillet , Piyanjali de Zoysa , Rodrigo Moreta-Herrera , Mari Herttalampi , Ruimei Sun , Eduardo Barros , Biljana Maslovarić , Cristian Balducci , Avner Caspi , Eric Raymond Igou , Trawin Chaleeraktrakoon , Mladen Adamowic , Eglantina Dervishi , Stéphanie Austin , Natalia Woropay-Hordziejewicz , Luis Eduardo Garrido , Elena Lisá , Sonya Dragova-Koleva , Saad A. S. Almoshawah , Sami M. Al-Mahjoob , Shanmukh Kamble , Bernadette Kun , Jane Parker , Yanina Lisun , Connie I. M. Chan , Halley M. Pontes , Samson John Mgaiwa , Dana Bdier , Dorthe Høj Jensen , Paweł A. Atroszko , Fatimah Wati Halim , Stanisław K. Czerwiński , Byron G. Adams , Vladimer Gamsakhurdia , Hussein Nabil Ismail , Zsolt Demetrovics , Anise M. S. Wu , Diana Boer , Angela Oktavia Suryani , Sergiu Bălțătescu , Mark J. M. Sullman , Seyyed Taha Moosavi Jahanabad , María José Serrano-Fernández , Tracy A. McFarlane , Joana Story , Ahmed Kerriche , Nejc Plohl , Michel Hansenne , Adil Samekin , Koorosh Massoudi , Rosita Sobhie , Mark D. Griffiths , Tuğba Özsoy , Ghada Shahrour , Vasiliki Efstathiou , Marion K. Schulmeyer , Dzintra Iliško , Alejandra del Carmen Domínguez Espinosa , J. Hannah Lee , Aleksandra Buźniak , Ivana Hromatko , Germano Vera Cruz , Xue Yang , Clifford K. Hlatywayo , Snezana Bilic , Hoon-Seok Choi , Nuworza Kugbey , Kjell Ivar Øvergård , Alan Roe , Jim Arrowsmith , Arnold B. Bakker , Katerina Zabrodska , Edyta Charzyńska , Stephen Asatsa , Liliya Sultanova , Arunas Ziedelis , Hesham F. Gadelrab , Naira Rafik Hakobyan , Bashar Banwan Hasan , Bettina Kubicek , Sónia P. Gonçalves , Ragna Benedikta Garðarsdóttir , Telman Z. Seisembekov , Shahnaz Aziz , Ståle Pallesen , Hang Thi Minh Nguyen , Marilyn Clark , Rajneesh Choubisa , Ulker Isayeva , Jelena Sladojević Matić , ĐorĐe Čekrlija , Zuzanna Schneider , Mendiola Teng-Calleja , Yohsuke Ohtsubo , Claude Fernet , Nitesh Bhatia , Chung-Jen Chien , Rachael Potter , Steve Sussman , Toivo Aavik , Paul Kakupa , Julio Torales , Maria Eugenia Fernandez , María Laura Lupano Perugini , Paola Spagnoli , Francesco Marcatto
2025
AbstractBackground and aimsDespite the last decade's significant development in the scientific study of work addiction/workaholism, this area of research is still facing a fundamental challenge, namely the need for a valid and reliable measurement tool that shows cross-cultural invariance and, as such, allows for worldwide studies on this phenomenon.MethodsAn initial 16-item questionnaire, developed within an addiction framework, was administered alongside job stress, job satisfaction, and self-esteem measures in a total sample of 31,352 employees from six continents and 85 cultures (63.5% females, mean age of 39.24 years).ResultsBased on theoretical premises and psychometric testing, the International Work Addiction Scale (IWAS) was developed as a short measure representing essential features of work addiction. The seven-item version (IWAS-7), covering all seven components of work addiction, showed partial scalar invariance across 81 cultures, while the five-item version (IWAS-5) showed it across all 85 cultures. Higher levels of work addiction on both versions were associated with higher job stress, lower job satisfaction, and lower self-esteem across cultures. The optimal cut-offs for the IWAS-7 (24 points) and IWAS-5 (18 points) were established with an overall accuracy of 96% for both versions.Discussion and conclusionsThe IWAS is a valid, reliable, and short screening scale that can be used in different cultures and languages, providing comparative and generalizable results. The scale can be used globally in clinical and organizational settings, with the IWAS-5 being recommended for most practical and clinical situations. This is the first study to provide data supporting the hypothesis that work addiction is a universal phenomenon worldwide.
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