Occupational stress and working climate profiles of medical professionals and auxiliary personnel: ten years after reunification

2000 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 287-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce Kirkcaldy ◽  
Lars-Eric Petersen ◽  
Rüdiger Trimpop
2009 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tadeusz Ostrowski

Self-esteem and social support in the occupational stress-subjective health relationship among medical professionals The starting point for the presented study was the concept by House who construed social support as buffering the impact of work-related stress on health. Self-esteem was taken under consideration as the other potential stress buffer. It was hypothesized that both social support and self-esteem would have a salutogenic effect, since they attenuate the experience of occupational stress and reduce health problems associated with the experienced job stress. Participants in the study were 361 medical professionals representing various specialties. They were examined using the Subjective Job Evaluation Questionnaire by Dudek et al., the Mood and Health State Questionnaire by Rząsa, the Self-Esteem Scale by M. Rosenberg and Significant Other Scale by Power et al. The higher was the respondents' occupational stress, the poorer was their subjective physical health. Such components of occupational stress as responsibility, psychological strain due to job complexity, lack of rewards at work, and a sense of threat were found to be most important in this respect. These four components of occupational stress were interrelated and constituted a feedback loop. The study confirmed a salutogenic role of self-esteem, contributing to subjective health improvement. Satisfaction with social support had also a positive role, since it reduced the amount of experienced job stress, thus exerting a health-promoting effect. There was a direct negative feedback loop between self-esteem and somatic health problems. Irrespective of that, satisfaction with social support was found to interact with perceived occupational stress in a negative feedback loop. However, neither of these two factors, i.e. self-esteem and social support, had an effect of buffering the impact of occupational stress on health. This suggests that the initial model proposed by House as well as the present author's earlier research findings obtained from a smaller sample should be revised.


2020 ◽  
Vol 185 (9-10) ◽  
pp. e1428-e1434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean F Villaruz Fisak ◽  
Barbara S Turner ◽  
Kyle Shepard ◽  
Sean P Convoy

Abstract Introduction Occupational stress can have a direct influence on worker safety and health. Navy medical professionals are known to neglect self-care, putting them at risk for deteriorations in psychological health that can lead to adverse patient outcomes. To support medical professionals, a peer-to-peer intervention called Buddy Care, embedded in Navy Medicine’s Caregiver Occupational Stress Control (CgOSC) program, was evaluated. Strategies to prevent and better manage occupational stress are vital to improve the health care providers’ abilities to cope with day-to-day stressors, which is crucial to maintaining mission readiness. The overarching aim of this quality improvement pilot project was to implement and evaluate Buddy Care and to provide context as an evidenced-based peer intervention and leadership tool at a military hospital in Guam. This project is the first to implement and evaluate Buddy Care intervention for an active duty U.S. Navy population stationed overseas. Materials and Methods A convenience sample of 40 Navy active duty assigned to three inpatient units were offered Buddy Care intervention, which was introduced by conducting a Unit Assessment. A pre-test and 3- and 6-month post-test intervention design used a self-administered, 79-item CgOSC Staff Wellness Questionnaire which included five validated measures to assess the independent variable: (1) Response to Stressful Experience Scale, (2) Perception of Safety, (3) Horizontal Cohesion, (4) Perceived Stress Scale, and (5) Burnout Measure, short version. This project was determined as exempt by the Department of Navy Human Research Protection Program and did not require further review by the Institutional Review Board. Results Of the 40 questionnaires collected, 39 were partially completed. Paired sample t-tests were conducted between designated time-points to maximize the sample size and retain the repeated measures nature of the outcome variables. The small sample size allowed for statistical comparisons; however no statistically significant differences were found across the time-points. There was a large effect size for Perceptions of Safety and a medium effect size for Burnout Measure from baseline to 3 months, with both lowered at the 6 months. Although the sample size was too small to achieve statistical significance, the effect size analysis suggested that significance might be obtained with a larger sample. Conclusion The small number of participants and missing data significantly limited the ability to identify reliable changes across time-points. Despite the lack of statistically significant findings, there was an unintended positive result. The Unit Assessment piqued the interest of other departments, and during the project period, 11 departments requested a Unit Assessment. Although there were no requests for Buddy Care intervention from the targeted sample, it was occurring an average of 40 times per month throughout the command. Replication of this project in a similar setting is encouraged so that Buddy Care can be further evaluated. Understanding the effectiveness of well-mental health programs that promote early intervention and prevention efforts may contribute to a psychologically tougher medically ready force. Shortly after project completion, a CgOSC Instruction was approved by the Navy Surgeon General, highlighting the importance of CgOSC and Buddy Care on the operational readiness of Navy Medicine.


2017 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 216-220
Author(s):  
Rodica Eugenia Sîrghie ◽  

Stress from work (occupational stress) has, as a consequence, multiple psychic and physical diseases (depression, sleep disorder, ulcer, infarction, immune disorder) and is increased by a series of predisposing factors. The study performed in 2015 in 11 hospitals in Bucharest which required completing a questionnaire by the medical professionals that were divided in a basic lot (75 ICU doctors and 75 ICU nurses) and a control lot (75 doctors and 75 nurses from different specialities). After the dates were statistically processed (using SPSS program) it pointed out significant differences between the basic lot (values well above normal limits) and the control lot comparing multiple items: the need of breaks during work hours, proper language during stressful situations, family life affected by exhaustion caused by the job itself, negative influence of the noise, negative influence of patients accuses about medical personnel, fear of professional risks, mistakes during work hours because of exhaustion, absence of guidelines and protocols, unreliable and insufficient drug and medical supplies, simultaneously treatment of more patients and insufficient medical personel, malpractice. Decreasing the influence of the negative factors may reduce the malpractice risk caused by exhaustion, may increase the quality of medical act and may reduce the exodus of medical professionals to the western countries.


1990 ◽  
Vol 45 (10) ◽  
pp. 1142-1145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lennart Levi
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Michailidis ◽  
Evie Michailidis

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liuqin Yang ◽  
Russell Johnson ◽  
Xichao Zhang ◽  
Paul Spector

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steve M. Jex ◽  
Jennifer L. Burnfield ◽  
Eyal Grauer ◽  
Gary A. Adams ◽  
Emily Morgan

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer S. Tucker ◽  
Robert R. Sinclair ◽  
Cynthia D. Mohr ◽  
Amy B. Adler ◽  
Jeffrey L. Thomas ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document