The MAastricht Instrument for Sustainable Employability - Italian version (MAISE-IT): a validation study

E. Picco*, I. Houkes, A. De Rijk, M. Miglioretti

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background Governments and employers aim to promote sustainable employability (SE) in aging societies. In the Netherlands, an instrument for capturing the employee perspective on SE, the MAastricht Instrument for Sustainable Employability (MAISE-NL), has recently been developed. This study seeks to validate the Italian version of the MAISE (MAISE-IT). Methods The MAISE-IT (a translated and culturally adapted version of the MAISE for the Italian population), the Work-Health Balance questionnaire and a demographic survey (age, gender, education, and occupational activity) were completed online by 455 respondents (328 public administration workers and 127 respondents recruited from social networks). Construct and criterion validity were tested by CFA; reliability, correlational analyses and subgroup differences with ANOVAs. Results The CFA analysis revealed that the MAISE-IT consists of 12 scales distributed in four areas: (1) Meaning of SE; (2) Level and Factors affecting SE; (3) Overall responsibility for SE; and (4) Responsibility for factors affecting SE. Construct and criterion validity and reliability were good. Italian workers reported a moderately high level of SE. They regarded employers to be somewhat more responsible for SE than employees. Conclusions This study showed the validity of the MAISE-IT in the Italian context. The MAISE-IT is valuable for tapping employees' needs in order to develop SE interventions tailored to the employee perspective.
Original languageEnglish
Article number541
Number of pages14
JournalBMC Public Health
Volume22
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Mar 2022

Keywords

  • Sustainable employability
  • Questionnaire
  • Workers' well-being
  • Occupational health psychology
  • Work-health balance
  • WORK ABILITY
  • PRODUCTIVITY
  • INTERVENTIONS
  • DEFINITION

Cite this