P
Paulien M. Bongers
Researcher at Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research
Publications - 89
Citations - 16046
Paulien M. Bongers is an academic researcher from Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neck pain & Psychosocial. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 88 publications receiving 15147 citations. Previous affiliations of Paulien M. Bongers include VU University Amsterdam & Public Health Research Institute.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
The Job Content Questionnaire (JCQ): an instrument for internationally comparative assessments of psychosocial job characteristics.
Robert Karasek,Chantal Brisson,Norito Kawakami,Irene L. D. Houtman,Paulien M. Bongers,Benjamin Amick +5 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that psychological job characteristics are more similar across national boundaries than across occupations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Psychosocial factors at work and musculoskeletal disease
TL;DR: It is concluded that monotonous work, high perceived work load, and time pressure are related to musculoskeletal symptoms.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Very Best of the Millennium: Longitudinal Research and the Demand-Control-(Support) Model
TL;DR: The methodological quality of longitudinal research examining R. Karasek and T. Theorell's (1990) demand-control-(support) model was addressed and good evidence was found for lagged causal effects of work characteristics, especially for self-reported health or well-being outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Systematic review of psychosocial factors at work and private life as risk factors for back pain.
TL;DR: There is evidence for an effect of work-related psychosocial factors, but the evidence for the role of specific factors has not been established yet.
Journal ArticleDOI
Are psychosocial factors, risk factors for symptoms and signs of the shoulder, elbow, or hand/wrist?: A review of the epidemiological literature
TL;DR: High job stress and non-work-related stress reactions are consistently associated with UEP and high job demands is also in most studies associated with these disorders.