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Journal ArticleDOI

Job satisfaction and occupational stress in UK general hospital nursing staff

Andrew Guppy, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1991 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 4, pp 315-323
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated factors associated with the perceptions of stress reported by nurses in a general hospital environment in the UK, and found that the levels and sources of stress experienced by nursing staff were examined in relation to the type of ward or department, and nursing grade.
Abstract
This study investigated factors associated with the perceptions of stress reported by nurses in a general hospital environment in the UK. The levels and sources of stress experienced by nursing staff were examined in relation to the type of ward or department, and nursing grade. The association between reported stress and job satisfaction was also examined. By means of a self-completion questionnaire survey, data were collected from 234 nurses from 24 wards in a single general hospital. The Brayfield and Rothe job satisfaction index was used to provide data for analysis. Factor analysis, analysis of variance, and Pearson product moment correlation procedures were performed on these data. The factor analysis identified two main factors concerned with sources of stress: interpersonal relations and resource problems, and dealing with death. Although there were no differences found across wards, the analyses of variance revealed that reported stress varied over different nursing grades. It was also f...

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Citations
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Association of Job-related Stress Factors with Psychological and Somatic Symptoms among Japanese Hospital Nurses: Effect of Departmental Environment in Acute Care Hospitals

TL;DR: The results show that working in operating rooms was associated with fatigue, thatWorking in intensive care units (ICU) was associatedwith anxiety, and that working with patients in surgery and internal medicine was associatedWith anxiety and depression independently of demographic factors and job‐related stress factors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stress among hospital nursing staff: Its causes and effects

TL;DR: Differences in the frequency of stress among the units investigated suggest 2 additional factors that need to be examined in future studies: structural characteristics of units that affect the amount of role conflict and ambiguity staff experience, and personality characteristics that may attract nurses to specific units.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sources of stress and dissatisfaction among nurses in four hospital environments.

TL;DR: Although there was little difference between the specialized and non-specialized groups of nurses in the degree of stress experienced, the work environments were found to be dissimilar and the reported level of dissatisfaction with their work environment combined with certain demographic characteristics were found significantly to predict the degreeof stress experienced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Control, stress, and job satisfaction in Canadian nurses

TL;DR: In this paper, the main effects of four domains of control (task, decision, resource, physical environment) on job satisfaction and their interactions with three types of job stressors (task demands, role conflict, interpersonal conflict) were examined in a sample of 765 Canadian nurses.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of the effects of shift rotation on nurses' stress, coping and strain

TL;DR: Despite the fact that shiftwork represents a major variable in nursing performance it has received scant empirical attention, it has been found that nurses who were low on neuroticism and who were satisfied with their work and their shift schedule adapted best to shiftwork.
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