Submitted:
16 December 2025
Posted:
17 December 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Work/er Wellbeing: A Historical Overview
2.1. Phase 1: A Focus on Occupational Safety and Risk Mitigation (1900–1950)
2.2. Phase 2: Organisational Psychology – A Remedial Focus (1960–1990)
- Occupational Health Psychology (OHP) is an applied field dedicated to enhancing the quality of working life and safeguarding worker wellbeing. Core concerns include preventing and addressing stress and burnout, shaping safety behaviours and safety culture, supporting healthier work–life balance through policy and programme design, and mitigating or treating the consequences of aggression and bullying at work (Quick, 1999; Schonfeld & Chang, 2017). Today OHP remains more explicitly health-centred, prioritising workers’ wellbeing, safety, and health. Its interventions typically target the reduction of workplace stressors and risks to improve wellbeing.
- Business (Organisational) Psychology is defined as the science and practice of improving working life and organisational functioning. Key domains include personnel selection and recruitment (e.g., designing tests, interviews, and other selection procedures), training and development, performance appraisal and improvement systems, leadership and management development, change and restructuring support, and team effectiveness (Mckenna, 2020). While often intersecting with OHP, Business Psychology has a broader remit encompassing recruitment, performance, leadership, and organisational design. Interventions commonly aim to enhance outcomes such as productivity, retention, and efficiency.
2.3. Phase 3: The Holistic and Positive Wellbeing Era (1990–Present)
- Positive Organisational Psychology (POP; Donaldson & Ko, 2010).This field is concerned with the scientific study of positive subjective experiences in the workplace. Its primary focus is on individual employees and the interface between employees and their organisations. Its key aim is to develop applications that enhance individuals’ quality of life within their work context. Typical topics include occupational wellbeing, positive leadership, job satisfaction, work engagement, motivation, positive relationships, and meaningful work.
- Positive Organisational Behaviour (POB; Luthans, 2002).POB is defined as “the study and application of positively oriented human resource strengths and psychological capacities that can be measured, developed, and effectively managed for performance improvement in today’s workplace” (Luthans, 2002, p. 59). The emphasis is therefore on individual-level positive psychological states and resources that relate to wellbeing or performance, such as strengths, hope, optimism, resilience, and prosocial behaviour.
- Positive Organisational Scholarship (POS; Cameron et al., 2003).POS is defined as “the study of that which is positive, flourishing, and life-giving in organisations” (Cameron & Caza, 2004, p. 731). It focuses on organisational characteristics and processes, and on their implications for both employees and organisations. This sub-domain examines the interpersonal and structural dynamics that are activated in and through organisations (Cameron & Caza, 2004), including phenomena such as organisational virtuousness, positive deviance, and appreciative cultures (Cameron et al., 2003). Its core concern is the achievement of work-related outcomes through positive means.
3. Work/er Wellbeing: Terminological Clutter
4. Work/er Wellbeing: Definitions in Disarray
5. Tracing the Sources of the Terminological and Conceptual Tangle in Work/er Wellbeing Scholarship
5.1. Interdisciplinary Challenges
- Multidisciplinary research: In this approach, researchers from different disciplines engage with a shared research problem while largely retaining their own disciplinary lenses. The contributing disciplines remain separate, offering parallel inputs to the research question without substantial integration of their methods or theoretical frameworks.
- Interdisciplinary research: This approach is more integrative, involving the deliberate amalgamation of theories, concepts, and methods from multiple disciplines. Researchers collaborate across disciplinary boundaries to co-create new frameworks and methodological approaches, with an emphasis on synthesising and unifying diverse perspectives.
- Transdisciplinary research: This category represents the highest level of integration, extending collaboration beyond academic disciplines to include non-academic stakeholders such as policymakers and practitioners. The focus is on addressing complex, real-world problems, rather than remaining confined to discipline-based theoretical concerns.
5.2. Legacy Terminology
5.3. The Construct of Wellbeing
5.4. Category Errors
- Context free concepts: These are concepts that refer to general or overall wellbeing.
- Wellbeing domains: These are context-specific concepts, such as such as psychological wellbeing, physical wellbeing, social wellbeing, occupational wellbeing, etc.
- Components of wellbeing: These refer to terms such as happiness, hedonic, or eudaimonic wellbeing, etc.
- Population segmentations: Referring for example to worker wellbeing, employee wellbeing, entrepreneur wellbeing, etc.
- Levels of wellbeing: Use of terms such as flourishing, languishing, suffering, illbeing, etc.
6. Reconceptualising Work/er Wellbeing: Towards an Integrative Meta-Framework
6.1. Mapping the Key Concepts that Feature in Work/er Wellbeing Scholarship
6.1.1. Overall Wellbeing
6.1.2. Wellbeing Domains
- Physical wellbeing
- Psychological wellbeing
- Social wellbeing
- Financial wellbeing
- Occupational wellbeing
- Occupational wellbeing: We treat this construct both as a domain of overall wellbeing and as an overarching term that encompasses wellbeing within the vocational sphere. It encompasses three specific occupational domains:
- Employment wellbeing
- Career wellbeing
- Work wellbeing
6.1.3. Population Segmentations
- Worker wellbeing
- Employee wellbeing
6.1.4. Components of Wellbeing
- Eudaimonic wellbeing, and
- Hedonic wellbeing, which is commonly subdivided into:
- Emotional wellbeing
- Evaluative wellbeing
6.1.5. Levels of Wellbeing
7. Defining the Key Terms in the Work/er Wellbeing Scholarship
7.1. Distinguishing the Concepts of Health and Wellbeing
7.2. Components of Wellbeing
- Hedonia, characterised by the pursuit of pleasure, and
- Eudaimonia, concerned with optimal functioning across life domains.
- Cognitive component: This involves an evaluation of one’s overall life satisfaction, requiring a subjective assessment of contentment with key life domains such as health, relationships, work, and finances.
- Emotional component: This reflects the frequency with which individuals experience positive emotions (e.g., excitement, joy, love) and negative emotions (e.g., fear, anger, disgust) over a given period.
7.3. Levels of Wellbeing
- Flourishingis defined as a desired state of overall wellbeing, indicating the relative attainment of a condition where all aspects of a person’s life are positive, and their living environments are conducive (Lomas & VanderWeele, 2023).
- Thriving is conceptualised as a desired state of overall wellbeing attained despite facing challenging or inhospitable contexts and circumstances (Lomas et al., 2023).
- Languishing denotes a lower level of wellbeing located around the middle of the wellbeing continuum (Keyes, 2002). It can be defined as an ambivalent condition characterised by a relative absence of positive states of quality, without the presence of distinctly low-quality states (Lomas et al., 2023)
- Struggling is a lower state of wellbeing, described as an ambivalent condition in which individuals attain some personal states of quality while simultaneously experiencing personal states that lack quality (Lomas et al., 2023).
- Illbeing (floundering or ailing) can be understood as an undesirable condition characterised by the absence of personal states of quality alongside the presence of personal states that lack quality (Lomas et al., 2023; Venning et al., 2013).
8. Conclusion
Author Contributions
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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| Concept | Definition |
| Overall wellbeing | Personal wellbeing may be understood as life satisfaction derived from an individual’s perceptions of their health, happiness, and sense of purpose (Litchfield et al., 2016). |
| Overall health | Overall health comprises a range of factors, including physical, mental, and social wellbeing, and is not merely the absence of disease or infirmity (Jarden et al., 2023). |
| Worker wellbeing | Chari et al. (2018) conceptualised worker wellbeing as a quality-of-life construct, referring to an individual’s health in relation to environmental, organisational, and psychosocial factors associated with work. Wellbeing is understood as the experience of positive perceptions and enabling conditions at, and outside of, work, that allow workers to thrive and realise their full potential. The authors further stressed that worker wellbeing should encompass both work and nonwork domains and should be assessed using both subjective and objective indicators. |
| Jarden et al. (2023) proposed that worker wellbeing can be understood as the balance between an individual’s resources and the challenges they face at work, with key components including subjective wellbeing, eudaimonic wellbeing, and social wellbeing. | |
| Employee wellbeing | Employee wellbeing refers to the overall quality of an individual’s experience at work, encompassing their physical, psychological, social, financial, and spiritual wellbeing (Pandey et al., 2025). |
| Page and Vella-Brodrick (2009) posited that subjective and psychological wellbeing should be regarded as key components of employee wellbeing. | |
| Warr (1990) defined employee wellbeing as the overall quality of an employee’s experience and functioning at work. He later refined this definition (Warr, 1999), describing it as the employee’s experience and functioning, incorporating both physical and psychological dimensions. | |
| Martela (2025) conceptualised employee wellbeing as a broad, subjective umbrella construct that encompasses the various factors that make work a positive experience for employees. | |
| Kinowska and Sienkiewicz (2023) observed that employee wellbeing is frequently conceptualised in terms of psychological wellbeing, which comprises two perspectives: a hedonic perspective, concerned with positive emotions and satisfaction, and a eudaimonic perspective, centred on the realisation of human potential. | |
| Employee wellbeing can be defined as an evaluation of employees’ physical, mental, and social state, encompassing both their work and non-work life experiences (Pipera & Fragouli, 2021). | |
| Grant et al. (2007) defined employee wellbeing as the overall quality of employees’ experience and functioning in the workplace. | |
| Boxall and Macky (2014) conceptualised employee wellbeing as a holistic construct comprising job satisfaction, physical health, mental health, and relationship outcomes. | |
| Danna and Griffin (1999) described employee wellbeing as encompassing employees’ physical and mental health, spanning both their work and broader life experiences. | |
| Employee wellbeing can be defined as how individuals feel and function within their workplaces. (Valtonen et al., 2025). | |
| Zheng et al. (2015) maintained that employee wellbeing can be understood as employees’ quality of life and psychological state in the workplace. | |
| Occupational wellbeing | Occupational wellbeing denotes the sense of meaning and satisfaction that individuals derive from their occupational lives (Doble & Santha, 2008). |
| Saraswati et al. (2019) proposed a framework in which occupational wellbeing is understood as the subjective meaning a person ascribes to their occupational life. It comprises several intrinsic needs: agency, accomplishment, affirmation, pleasure renewal, coherence, and companionship. | |
| Work wellbeing | Laine and Rinne (2015), in their review of 316 papers, observed that most contemporary definitions of work wellbeing employ subjective wellbeing as a key indicator, referring to individuals’ cognitive and affective evaluations of their lives. Psychological wellbeing constitutes another core component of work wellbeing, reflecting positive psychological functioning. |
| Work/place wellbeing | De-Neve and Ward (2025) used the term work wellbeing interchangeably with workplace wellbeing and observed that researchers frequently conflate workplace wellbeing with workplace subjective wellbeing (often labelled workplace happiness) and therefore proposed a definition of workplace wellbeing grounded in subjective wellbeing. Workplace subjective wellbeing, in their view, comprises three elements: evaluative job satisfaction, emotional experiences at work, and eudaimonic work wellbeing, that is, experiencing work as purposeful, worthwhile, or meaningful. They further argued that eudaimonia is embedded within subjective wellbeing. |
| Workplace wellbeing | Wallace (2022) conceptualised workplace wellbeing as a biopsychosocial construct encompassing physical, mental, and social health. |
| According to Leiter and Cooper (2017) workplace wellbeing encompasses physical health and comfort, mental health, a predominance of positive over negative affect, and favourable attitudes towards one’s work. | |
| Workplace well-being, is “defined as an employee’s subjective evaluation of his or her ability to develop and optimally function within the workplace” (Bartels et al., 2019, p.3) and incorporates 11 dimensions: Six that are incorporated in Ryff’s (1989) Psychological Wellbeing model (purpose, autonomy, mastery, relationship, and self acceptance), and five drawn from Keyes’ (1998) Social Wellbeing model (social integration, social acceptance, social contribution, social actualization, and social coherence). | |
| Workplace wellbeing refers to employees’ overall experience and functioning, encompassing both physical and psychological dimensions. It is a construct that is partly determined by employees’ personality traits and partly shaped by their working conditions (Kinowska & Sienkiewicz, 2023). | |
| Wellbeing at work | Fisher (2014) proposed that wellbeing at work comprises three components: subjective wellbeing at work (including positive attitudinal judgements and the experience of positive and negative affect), eudaimonic wellbeing at work (involving engagement in growth-oriented, self-actualising behaviours), and social wellbeing at work (centred on the relational aspects of work). |
| Work wellness | Work wellness is an optimal state of living that each individual can attain, encompassing physical, mental, and spiritual wellbeing. It may be defined as a way of life oriented towards optimal health and wellbeing, in which body, mind, and spirit are integrated to enable fuller participation in both human and natural communities (Klerk, 2005). |
| Wicken (2000) described work wellness as a component of overall wellness, defined as the process of becoming aware of and making choices toward a more successful existence. It encompassed several dimensions such as social, spiritual, physical, occupational, emotional and intellectual. | |
| Employee welfare | Lintong and Bukidz (2024) defined employee welfare as a state in which individuals feel happy, healthy, and safe, and have opportunities to develop their potential. |
| Quality of work life | Horst et al. (2014) defined quality of work life as employees’ evaluation of the demands they face and the aspirations they hold in relation to working conditions, remuneration, professional development, work–family and role balance, safety, and social interactions in the workplace. |
| Quality of work life refers to the favourable workplace conditions and environments that support employees’ welfare and wellbeing (Huang et al., 2007). | |
| Quality of life at work | Quality of life at work “has been understood as the dynamic and comprehensive management of physical, technological, social, and psychological factors that affect culture and renew the organisational environment” (Schmidt et al., 2008, p.331). |
| Subjective Wellbeing at Work | Subjective wellbeing at work refers to employees’ day-to-day emotional experiences at work, both positive and negative, as well as their satisfaction with their work (Magnier-Watanabe et al., 2023). |
| Workplace happiness | Workplace happiness describes employees’ experience of feeling energised and enthusiastic about their work, perceiving it as meaningful and purposeful, enjoying positive relationships at work, and feeling committed to their jobs (Kun & Gadanecz, 2022). |
| Happiness at work | Fitriana et al. (2021) defined happiness at work as feeling good about one’s work, feeling positive about job characteristics, and feeling aligned with the organisation as a whole, reflected in pleasant judgements and experiences such as positive feelings, flow at work, moods, and emotions. |
| Job satisfaction | Judge et al. (2017) defined job satisfaction as the overall evaluative judgement one holds about one’s job. It represents an assessment of the favourability of the job, typically conceptualised along a continuum from positive to negative. Organisational psychologists distinguish between overall satisfaction—one’s evaluation of the job as a whole—and facet satisfactions, which concern specific aspects of the job, such as work tasks, pay, promotions, supervision, or coworkers, such as those that make up the job. |
| Workplace flourishing | According to Rautenbach (2015) workplace flourishing comprises three dimensions: emotional, psychological, and social wellbeing. |
| Flourishing at work | Flourishing at work refers to a high state of employee wellbeing that arises from positive work experiences and the effective management of job-related factors (Redelinghuys et al., 2019). |
| Thriving at work | Spreitzer et al. (2005) conceptualised thriving at work as a psychological state characterised by employees’ vitality and learning. Thriving employees feel energised and alive, while simultaneously perceiving that they are gaining new knowledge and skills. |
| Concept | Definition | Notes | Synonymous terms |
| Overall wellbeing | A continuum that reflects the relative attainment of a personal subjective state of quality across key life domains (Lomas et al., 2023). | Represents “a life well lived.” Aggregates several wellbeing domains (physical, psychological, occupational, financial, and social wellbeing). |
General wellbeing, global wellbeing, complete wellbeing |
| Population segmentation | |||
| Worker wellbeing | A continuum that reflects a worker’s relative attainment of a personal subjective state of quality across key life domains (Lomas et al., 2023). | The overall wellbeing of working people (Wijngaards et al., 2022). Similar to overall wellbeing, it aggregates several wellbeing domains. |
|
| Employee wellbeing | A continuum that reflects an employee’s relative attainment of a personal subjective state of quality across key life domains (Lomas et al., 2023). | The overall wellbeing of those employed by organisations (Wijngaards et al., 2022). Similar to overall wellbeing, it aggregates several wellbeing domains |
|
| Work-related domains | |||
| Occupational wellbeing | A continuum that reflects the relative attainment of a personal subjective state of quality in the occupational domain. | An overarching term that encompasses a person’s employment wellbeing, career wellbeing, and work wellbeing. | |
| Employment wellbeing | A continuum that reflects the relative attainment of a personal subjective state of quality in the employment domain. | Pertains specifically to the domain of employment, encompassing wellbeing in relation to one’s current employment circumstances, including unemployment, employment, overemployment, underemployment, and other related conditions. | |
| Career wellbeing | A continuum that reflects the relative attainment of a personal subjective state of quality in the career domain. | Refers specifically to the career domain, encompassing an individual’s longer-term career trajectory and mobility across workplaces and roles. | |
| Work wellbeing | A continuum that reflects the relative attainment of a personal subjective state of quality in their current work domain. | Denotes wellbeing specifically in relation to an individual’s present work situation. | Workplace wellbeing, wellbeing at work |
| Concept | Definition | Notes | Synonymous terms |
| Overall happiness | A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment and emotional experience across key life domains. | Includes both the emotional experience and the evaluative component. Aggregates several life domains (physical, psychological, occupational, financial, and social wellbeing). |
General / global / overall subjective wellbeing, general / global happiness |
| Life satisfaction | A continuum that reflects a person’s overall contentment with life across key life domains. | Contains the evaluative component of happiness. | Satisfaction with life. |
| Emotional wellbeing | A continuum that reflects a person’s emotional experience across key life domains. | Contains the emotional experience of happiness. |
General / overall / global emotional wellbeing, hedonic / affective wellbeing |
| Population segmentation | |||
| Worker happiness | A continuum that reflects a worker’s contentment and emotional experience across key life domains. | Pertains to working people. Includes both an emotional experience and the evaluative component. Aggregates several life domains (physical, psychological, occupational, financial, and social wellbeing). |
Worker Subjective Wellbeing |
|
Employee happiness |
A continuum that reflects an employee’s contentment and emotional experience across key life domains. | Pertains to employees. Includes both an emotional experience and the evaluative component. Aggregates several life domains (physical, psychological, occupational, financial, and social wellbeing). |
Employee Subjective Wellbeing |
| Worker life satisfaction | A continuum that reflects a worker’s contentment with life across key life domains. | Contains the evaluative component of happiness. | Worker satisfaction with life. |
|
Employee life satisfaction |
A continuum that reflects an employee’s contentment with life across key life domains. | Contains the evaluative component of happiness. | Employee satisfaction with life. |
| Worker emotional wellbeing | A continuum that reflects a worker’s emotional experience across key life domains. | Contains the emotional component of happiness. | Worker hedonic / affective wellbeing |
|
Employee emotional wellbeing |
A continuum that reflects an employee’s emotional experience across key life domains | Contains the emotional component of happiness. | Employee hedonic / affective wellbeing |
| Work-related domains | |||
|
Happiness with one’s occupational state |
A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment and emotional experience within their current occupation. | Includes both the emotional experience and the evaluative component. Refers specifically to the occupational domain. |
Subjective occupational wellbeing |
| Happiness with one’s employment | A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment and emotional experience within their current employment. | Includes both the emotional experience and the evaluative component. Refers specifically to the employment domain. |
Subjective employment wellbeing |
| Happiness with one’s career | A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment and emotional experience within their career domain. | Includes both the emotional experience and the evaluative component. Refers specifically to the career domain. |
Subjective career wellbeing |
| Happiness with work | A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment and emotional experience within their current work domain | Includes both the emotional experience of quality and the evaluative component. Refers specifically to the work domain. |
Workplace happiness, Happiness at work, subjective wellbeing at work, subjective work wellbeing |
| Satisfaction with one’s occupational state | A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment with their current occupational state. | Includes only the evaluative component. Refers specifically to the occupational domain. |
Occupational satisfaction |
| Satisfaction with one’s employment | A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment with their current employment. | Includes only the evaluative component. Refers specifically to the employment domain. |
Employment satisfaction |
| Satisfaction with one’s career | A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment with their career, | Includes only the evaluative component. Refers specifically to the career domain. |
Career satisfaction |
| Satisfaction with work | A continuum that reflects a person’s contentment with their current work. | Includes only the evaluative component. Refers specifically to the work domain. |
Job / work / workplace satisfaction |
| Occupation related hedonic wellbeing | A continuum that reflects a person’s emotional experience within their current occupation. | Includes only the emotional component. Refers specifically to the occupational domain. |
Occupation related emotional / affective wellbeing |
| Employment related hedonic wellbeing | A continuum that reflects a person’s emotional experience within their current employment. | Includes only the emotional component. Refers specifically to the employment domain. |
Employment related emotional / affective wellbeing |
|
Career related Hedonic wellbeing |
A continuum that reflects a person’s emotional experience within their career. | Includes only the emotional component. Refers specifically to the career domain. |
Career related emotional / affective wellbeing |
| Work related hedonic wellbeing | A continuum that reflects a person’s emotional experience within their current work. | Includes only the emotional component. Refers specifically to the work domain. |
Job / work / related emotional / affective wellbeing |
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