“…Psychosocial work factors such as skill level, job strain, work‐life balance, psychological job demand, decision latitude, decision authority and job control can also influence QoL. Psychosocial work factors as a whole affected the QoL of male Malaysian automotive factory workers (Edimansyah, Rusli, Naing, Mohamed, & Winn, ); other studies linked QoL with specific aspects, such as job strain (Lerner, Levine, Malspeis, & D'Agostino, ; Tzeng, Chung, & Yang, ), job control (Liang, Hsieh, Lin, & Chen, ), social support (Jönsson, ; Liang et al., ; Tzeng et al., ), work‐life imbalance (Makabe, Takagai, Asanuma, Ohtomo, & Kimura, ), occupational stress and role overload (Wu, Li, Wang, Yang, & Qiu, ) and imbalanced effort/reward (Teles et al., ). However, promotion of work ability can benefit QoL in physical, psychosocial, social relationship and environmental domains (Milosevic et al., ; Sörensen et al., ) and positive correlations between QoL domains and job satisfactions have also been revealed (Cimete, Gencalp, & Keskin, ; Ibrahim et al., ).…”