Tokenism and Cultural Diversity in Counselors: Implications for Rehabilitation Education and Practice

2000 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elias Mpofu ◽  
Debra A. Harley

Minority counselors are an important resource for diversity sensitive rehabilitation services. However, their work-related experiences have not been the subject of study in the rehabilitation literature. Tokenism theory is utilized to explore possible work-related stress experienced by minority counselors. Specifically, minority counselors may experience the tokenism effects of visibility, contrast, role encapsulation, and assimilation from their interaction with majority counselors and from their self-perceptions. Counselor education in work-place diversity and an asset approach to counselor utilization should enhance the perceived quality of the work environment by both minority and majority counselors.

2016 ◽  
Vol 157 (49) ◽  
pp. 1955-1959 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katalin Fusz ◽  
Béla Faludi ◽  
Dorina Pusztai ◽  
Nóra Sebők ◽  
András Oláh

Introduction: The quality of sleep can be influenced by several factors, insomnia in turn has an effect on the state of health. Aim: The aim of our survey is to measure the effects of insomnia, furthermore, the sleep affecting agents and habits to help to fall asleep among adults. Method: We collected the online nationwide and the written datas from the South-Transdanubia region, 455 adults filled the questionnaire which contains the Athens Insomnia Scale. Results: 13.4% of participants has insomnia, it is influenced by the quality of diet (p<0.001), comsumption of coffee (p = 0.045) and the physical activity (p = 0.011), what is more in correlation with the prevalency of chronic deseases (p = 0.001) and psychosomatic symptoms (p<0.001). The most frequent causes of sleep disorders are: work-related stress (35.6%), personal-life stress (35.4%) and pain (24.2%). In case of dormition problems most of the participants watch television (52.1%) and read (33%); 7.5% and 11.4% of the responders use sleeping pills and tisane. Conclusions: We attract attention to the prevalency and effects of insomnia, and the habits to help to fall asleep. Orv. Hetil., 2016, 157(49), 1955–1959.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  

Various studies have been discussed in the past time to predispose the contact of work place stressors on work quality of nurse. Most of the studies focused on the work place stressors and their relationship between work related quality of life of nurses that how stressors can affect the work quality of nurses and what are the reasons or is there any negative or positive relation between stressors and work quality. This study seeks to analyze the impact of work place stressors among nurses in their work quality by acquiring a quantitative testing method of administering questionnaires to the nurses in the health work place in Northern Cyprus. If the stressors that alter the task quality of nurses are low in the work place, there can be a positive relation between them and can make nurses work more comfortable and relaxed. The main findings suggests that there is a symbolic negative relationship of job place stressors with work nature and aspect of nurses. The results discloses that the frequency of job place stressors have a eloquent contact on work quality of nurses and there is a statistically expressive negative linear contingency within job related element of life and Nurses stress. In health care organization, designing and creating work to be more important and meaningful in their performance and in the manner at which their contributions are acknowledged.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denny Meyer ◽  
Madawa W Jayawardana ◽  
Samuel D Muir ◽  
David Yen-Teh Ho ◽  
Olivia Sackett

BACKGROUND Workplace programs designed to improve the health and psychological well-being of employees are becoming increasingly popular. However, there are mixed reports regarding the effectiveness of such programs and little analysis of what helps people to engage with such programs. OBJECTIVE This evaluation of a particularly broad, team-based, digital health and well-being program uses mixed methods to identify the elements of the program that reduce work stress and promote psychological well-being, sleep quality, and productivity of employees. METHODS Participation in the Virgin Pulse Global Challenge program during May to September 2016 was studied. Self-reported stress, sleep quality, productivity, and psychological well-being data were collected both pre- and postprogram. Participant experience data were collected through a third final survey. However, the response rates for the last 2 surveys were only 48% and 10%, respectively. A random forest was used to estimate the probability of the completion of the last 2 surveys based on the preprogram assessment data and the demographic data for the entire sample (N=178,350). The inverse of these estimated probabilities were used as weights in hierarchical linear models in an attempt to address any estimation bias caused by the low response rates. These linear models described changes in psychological well-being, stress, sleep, and productivity over the duration of the program in relation to gender and age, engagement with each of the modules, each of the program features, and participant descriptions of the Virgin Pulse Global Challenge. A 0.1% significance level was used due to the large sample size for the final survey (N=18,653). RESULTS The final analysis suggested that the program is more beneficial for older people, with 2.9% greater psychological well-being improvements observed on average in the case of women than men (P<.001). With one exception, all the program modules contributed significantly to the outcome measures with the following average improvements observed: psychological well-being, 4.1%-6.0%; quality of sleep, 3.2%-6.9%; work-related stress, 1.7%-6.8%; and productivity, 1.9%-4.2%. However, only 4 of the program features were found to have significant associations with the outcome measures with the following average improvements observed: psychological well-being, 3.7%-5.6%; quality of sleep, 3.4%-6.5%; work-related stress, 4.1%-6.4%; and productivity, 1.6%-3.2%. Finally, descriptions of the Virgin Pulse Global Challenge produced 5 text topics that were related to the outcome measures. Healthy lifestyle descriptions showed a positive association with outcomes, whereas physical activity and step count tracking descriptions showed a negative association with outcomes. CONCLUSIONS The complementary use of qualitative and quantitative survey data in a mixed-methods analysis provided rich information that will inform the development of this and other programs designed to improve employee health. However, the low response rates and the lack of a control group are limitations, despite the attempts to address these problems in the analysis.


Author(s):  
Subas Neupane ◽  
Saila Kyrönlahti ◽  
Hanna Kosonen ◽  
K. C. Prakash ◽  
Anna Siukola ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose To study the workers’ perception of the quality of work community and its association with intention to retire early, separately among women and men working in Finnish postal service. Methods A questionnaire survey was sent to all Finnish postal services employees aged ≥ 50 years in 2016 and 44% (n = 2096) replied to the survey (mean age 56.3, 40% women). Employee’s intention to retire before statutory retirement was measured on a scale of 1–5 and dichotomized. The quality of work community was defined by four composite variables: equality at work, flexibility at work, supportive work environment and health or other reason and trichotomized by their tercile values. Odds ratio (ORs) and their 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for associations of quality of work community with intention to retire were calculated separately for men and women using log binomial regression models adjusted for potential confounders. Results About one-third of respondents intended to retire early with no significant gender difference in retirement intention. Low equality at work (women OR 2.77, 95% CI 1.60–4.81; men 2.84, 1.80–4.48) and low flexibility at work (women 3.30, 1.94–5.60; men 2.91, 1.88–4.50) was associated with higher likelihood of intention to retire. Among women intention to retire was found less likely due to low supportive work environment (0.52, 0.31–0.89) and among men due to intermediate health or other reason (0.65, 043–0.98). Conclusion The results highlight the importance of the quality of work community as well as the promotion of work-related health in order to encourage employees to remain at workforce for longer.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra Sarafoglou ◽  
Marton Kovacs ◽  
Bence Endre Bakos ◽  
Eric-Jan Wagenmakers ◽  
Balazs Aczel

The preregistration of research protocols and analysis plans is a main reform innovation to counteract confirmation bias in the social and behavioral sciences. While theoretical reasons to preregister are frequently discussed in the literature, the individually experienced advantages and disadvantages of this method remain largely unexplored. The goal of this exploratory study was to identify the benefits and challenges of preregistration from the researcher's perspective. To this aim, we surveyed 355 researchers, 299 of whom had used preregistration in their own work. The researchers indicated the experienced or expected effects of preregistration on their workflow. The results show that experiences and expectations are mostly positive. Researchers in our sample believe that implementing preregistration improves or is likely to improve the quality of their projects, and that preregistration makes it easier to avoid questionable research practices. Criticism of preregistration is primarily related to the increase in work-related stress and the overall duration of the project. The majority of researchers with experience in preregistration reported that the benefits outweigh the challenges. However, the majority of researchers without preregistration would not consider preregistration for future projects or recommend the practice to colleagues. Our interpretation of the results is that preregistration can have positive side-effects as it adds an extra preparatory step in researchers' workflow, thus requiring researchers to think through the theoretical and practical aspects of their project.


RISORSA UOMO ◽  
2009 ◽  
pp. 375-386
Author(s):  
Guido Sarchielli ◽  
Stefano Toderi ◽  
Ivan Gaetani ◽  
Carla Carvalho

- Emotional dissonance has been conceptualized as a stressor anchored to the work environment. Coherently some researches showed that it predicts burnout beyond what is explained by classical stressors (job demand, control, support). The aim of the research was to evaluate on 134 teachers if the same results can be provided considering five indicators of stress, and if burnout mediates this relationship. Results showed that emotional dissonance predicts all the stress indicators. Burnout (emotional exhaustion) mediates for cognitive symptoms and positive affective experience, but not for psychosomatic symptoms, job satisfaction and negative affective experience. It is concluded that emotional dissonance should be included in work related stress management and prevention intervention.


2015 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 216-220
Author(s):  
Mariana Ciobanu ◽  
Ionela Gabriela Bucse ◽  
Christian Ghermec

Occupational noise is a complex of sounds of different levels and pitches, with different characteristics (impulsive, pure, audible), rhythmic or nonrhythmic, produced continuously by machines, instruments, devices or discontinuously by vehicles, human voice, during occupational activity. Noise problem is more complex and from this point of view things are far from being good. ”Vladimir Spilda, Commissary for Social Affairs and Egual Chances: Noise effects are not limited only to lossing hearing, He can be causing workplace accidents and increasing stress level.” Noise can be source of risk of workplace accidents, work-related stress and combined with other risk factors at the work place can damage health in both the long and short term.


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