The Effects of Sickness Absence on Job Insecurity via Skills Obsolescence: A Longitudinal Study

Keeping up with workplace changes can be particularly challenging for workers returning from sickness absence, especially in industries where technological advancements continuously reshape job demands. Upon return, workers may experience skills obsolescence, where previously acquired skills have de...

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Main Authors: Angela Messioui, Tinka van Vuuren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stockholm University Press 2025-05-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology
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Online Access:https://account.sjwop.com/index.php/su-j-sjwop/article/view/287
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author Angela Messioui
Tinka van Vuuren
author_facet Angela Messioui
Tinka van Vuuren
author_sort Angela Messioui
collection DOAJ
description Keeping up with workplace changes can be particularly challenging for workers returning from sickness absence, especially in industries where technological advancements continuously reshape job demands. Upon return, workers may experience skills obsolescence, where previously acquired skills have deteriorated or become outdated, increasing their sense of job insecurity. Drawing on Conservation of Resources (COR) theory, which posits that resource depletion triggers further resource loss, this study investigates whether economic and technical skills obsolescence mediate the relationship between sickness absence duration and job insecurity. Using longitudinal data from a Dutch telecom company (N = 490), we found no direct effect of sickness absence duration on job insecurity, nor an indirect effect via technical skills obsolescence. However, economic skills obsolescence significantly mediated this relationship, indicating that workers who were absent perceived their skills as outdated due to missed technological and organisational developments, increasing their job insecurity. This aligns with COR theory’s principle that workers with fewer resources become more vulnerable to additional losses. These findings highlight the need for return-to-work policies that support workers in staying up to date with workplace developments and maintaining job security. Organisations can facilitate this by (1) providing structured updates on technological and organisational changes, (2) offering learning opportunities to mitigate economic skills obsolescence, and (3) fostering a supportive work environment that helps workers regain confidence and adapt to evolving job demands. Such measures can reduce job insecurity and support long-term workforce employabililty.
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spelling doaj-art-8448dd854a9e415eafd36d4d18f9f1f32025-08-20T02:22:16ZengStockholm University PressScandinavian Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology2002-28672025-05-011016610.16993/sjwop.287287The Effects of Sickness Absence on Job Insecurity via Skills Obsolescence: A Longitudinal StudyAngela Messioui0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7714-4959Tinka van Vuuren1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0052-3234Research Centre for Education and the Labour Market (ROA), Maastricht University School of Business and EconomicsOpen Universiteit, HeerlenKeeping up with workplace changes can be particularly challenging for workers returning from sickness absence, especially in industries where technological advancements continuously reshape job demands. Upon return, workers may experience skills obsolescence, where previously acquired skills have deteriorated or become outdated, increasing their sense of job insecurity. Drawing on Conservation of Resources (COR) theory, which posits that resource depletion triggers further resource loss, this study investigates whether economic and technical skills obsolescence mediate the relationship between sickness absence duration and job insecurity. Using longitudinal data from a Dutch telecom company (N = 490), we found no direct effect of sickness absence duration on job insecurity, nor an indirect effect via technical skills obsolescence. However, economic skills obsolescence significantly mediated this relationship, indicating that workers who were absent perceived their skills as outdated due to missed technological and organisational developments, increasing their job insecurity. This aligns with COR theory’s principle that workers with fewer resources become more vulnerable to additional losses. These findings highlight the need for return-to-work policies that support workers in staying up to date with workplace developments and maintaining job security. Organisations can facilitate this by (1) providing structured updates on technological and organisational changes, (2) offering learning opportunities to mitigate economic skills obsolescence, and (3) fostering a supportive work environment that helps workers regain confidence and adapt to evolving job demands. Such measures can reduce job insecurity and support long-term workforce employabililty.https://account.sjwop.com/index.php/su-j-sjwop/article/view/287sickness absenceeconomic skills obsolescencetechnical skills obsolescencejob insecurity
spellingShingle Angela Messioui
Tinka van Vuuren
The Effects of Sickness Absence on Job Insecurity via Skills Obsolescence: A Longitudinal Study
Scandinavian Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology
sickness absence
economic skills obsolescence
technical skills obsolescence
job insecurity
title The Effects of Sickness Absence on Job Insecurity via Skills Obsolescence: A Longitudinal Study
title_full The Effects of Sickness Absence on Job Insecurity via Skills Obsolescence: A Longitudinal Study
title_fullStr The Effects of Sickness Absence on Job Insecurity via Skills Obsolescence: A Longitudinal Study
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Sickness Absence on Job Insecurity via Skills Obsolescence: A Longitudinal Study
title_short The Effects of Sickness Absence on Job Insecurity via Skills Obsolescence: A Longitudinal Study
title_sort effects of sickness absence on job insecurity via skills obsolescence a longitudinal study
topic sickness absence
economic skills obsolescence
technical skills obsolescence
job insecurity
url https://account.sjwop.com/index.php/su-j-sjwop/article/view/287
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