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239 Notes Notes to the Introduction 1. Wayne Oates, Confessions of a Workaholic (New York: World, 1971). 2. Chris Wright, “The Truth about Workaholism,” The Fix: Addiction and Recovery, Straight Up, 24 September 2012, www.thefix.com/content/reckless-pursuit-being -busy, accessed 10 October 2012. 3. Samantha Rush,“Problematic Use of Smartphones in the Workplace: An Introductory Study,” PhD diss., Central Queensland University, 2011. 4. International Center for Media and the Public Agenda, “The World Unplugged: Going 24 Hours without Media” (University Park: University of Maryland, 2011). 5. Bryan Robinson,“Chained to the Desk: Work May Be the Great Unexamined Therapy Issue of Our Time,” Family Therapy Networker, July–August 2000, 26–37. 6. Steve Yoder,“Is America Overworked?” Fiscal Times, 16 February 2012. 7. Heather Berrigan,“Is the Workplace the Real American Idol?” Living Church Foundation , 30 November 2003, 1. 8. Wright,“The Truth about Workaholism.” 9. Bryan Robinson, The Smart Guide to Managing Stress (New York: Smart Guide, 2012). 10. Neil Chesanow,“Vacation for the Health of it,” Endless Vacation, January–February 2005, 31–32. 11. CareerBuilder, “One-in-Four Workers Can’t Afford to Take a Vacation.” CareerBuilder Survey, 25 May 2011. 12. Hugo Martin,“Survey Finds Lots of Unused Vacation Time,” Los Angeles Times, 25 November 2012. 13. Stephanie Rosenbloom,“Please Don’t Make Me Go on Vacation,” New York Times, 10 August 2006. 14. Marilyn Machlowitz, Workaholics: Living with Them, Working with Them (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1985). 15. Daniel Seligman,“The Curse of Work,” Fortune, 7 March 1994, 133. 16. Quoted in Wright,“The Truth about Workaholism.” 17. Quoted in Loren Stein,“Workaholism: It’s No Longer Seen as a Respectable Vice,” A Healthy Me, 25 March 2006, 2. 18. Quoted in Emilie Filou, “Death in the Office,” World Business, July–August 2006, 19–22. 240 Notes to the Introduction 19. American Psychiatric Association, “Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) Code Changes for 2013,” http://www.psychiatry.org/practice/managing-a-practice/cpt -changes-2013, accessed 14 June 2013. Notes to Chapter 1 1. See, for example, Sandra Haymon, “The Relationship of Work Addiction and Depression, Anxiety, and Anger in College Males,” PhD diss., Florida State University , 1992; Bryan Robinson, Claudia Flowers, and Chris Burris, “An Empirical Study of the Relationship between Self-Leadership and Workaholism ‘Firefighter’ Behaviors,” Journal of Self-Leadership 2 (2005): 22–36; Janet Spence and Ann Robbins ,“Workaholics: Definitions, Measurement, and Preliminary Results,” Journal of Personality Assessment 58 (1992): 160–78. 2. Ishu Ishiyama and Akio Kitayama,“Overwork and Career-Centered Self-Validation among the Japanese: Psychosocial Issues and Counselling Implications.” International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling 17 (1994): 167–82. 3. Parul Sharma and Jyoti Sharma,“Work Addiction: A Poison by Slow Motion,” Journal of Economics and Behavioral Studies 2 (2011): 86–91. 4. Consult the appendix for a more detailed explanation of the psychometric properties of the WART, or refer to the following research studies: Claudia Flowers and Bryan Robinson, “A Structural and Discriminant Analysis of the Work Addiction Risk Test,” Educational and Psychological Measurement 62 (2002): 517–26; Bryan Robinson, “Concurrent Validity of the Work Addiction Risk Test as a Measure of Workaholism,” Psychological Reports 79 (1996): 1313–14; Bryan Robinson and Bruce Phillips, “Measuring Workaholism: Content Validity of the Work Addiction Risk Test,” Psychological Reports 77 (1995): 657–58; Bryan Robinson and Phyllis Post, “Validity of the Work Addiction Risk Test,” Perceptual and Motor Skills 78 (1994): 337–38; Bryan Robinson and Phyllis Post, “Split-Half Reliability of the Work Addiction Risk Test: Development of a Measure of Workaholism,” Psychological Reports 76 (1995): 1226; Bryan Robinson, Phyllis Post, and Judith Khakee, “TestRetest Reliability of the Work Addiction Risk Test,” Perceptual and Motor Skills 74 (1992): 926; Sandra Swary, “Myers-Briggs Type and Workaholism,” honors thesis, Georgia State University, 1996. Notes to Chapter 2 1. Bryan Robinson, Claudia Flowers, and Chris Burris, “An Empirical Study of the Relationship between Self-Leadership and Workaholism ‘Firefighter’ Behavior,” Journal of Self-Leadership 2 (2005): 22–36. 2. Bryan Robinson, Work Addiction (Deerfield Beach, FL: HCI, 1989). 3. Wayne Oates, Confessions of a Workaholic (New York: World, 1971). 4. Diane Fassel describes work anorexics in Working Ourselves to Death (San Francisco : Harper and Row, 2000). 5. Gayle Porter,“Organizational Impact of Workaholism: Suggestions for Researching [18.226.96.61] Project MUSE (2024-04-19 23:35 GMT) Notes to Chapter 3 241 the Negative Outcomes of Excessive Work,” Journal of Occupational Health Psychology 1 (1996): 70–84. 6. Fassel, Working...

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