Development of the Japanese version of the perceived time poverty scale
Takeshi Miura, Koji Hara, Azusa Arimoto, Masato Kaneko, Sayuri Shiraishi, Shingo Matsumura, Shuichi Ito, Kentaro Kurasawa, Yohei Matsuzaki, Makoto Kuroki

TL;DR
This study developed a Japanese version of a scale to measure perceived time poverty, showing it is reliable and valid for use in Japan.
Contribution
The study created and validated a culturally adapted Japanese version of the Perceived Time Poverty Scale.
Findings
The scale showed high reliability with a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.90.
Perceived time poverty was negatively correlated with sleep and leisure time, and positively with childcare time.
The scale demonstrated validity by correlating with well-being, psychological distress, and social isolation.
Abstract
Employed households experience time poverty, which refers to feeling overwhelmed because of the struggle to balance work and life. Time poverty is subjectively perceived as a lack of personal free time. In Japan, long working hours and societal expectations regarding the division of work and family roles may influence the perception of time poverty. This issue is of significant concern, as it can impact individuals’ rest time and work productivity. However, there is currently no standardized measurement method to assess time poverty appropriately in the Japanese context. The lack of such a method challenges establishing a foundation for developing effective support strategies. Given this background, this study aimed to quantify time poverty among employed households by developing a Japanese version of the Perceived Time Poverty Scale and examining its reliability and validity. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWork-Family Balance Challenges · Workplace Health and Well-being · Health disparities and outcomes
