Stress At Work: A Review and Theoretical Framework, II
- 1 February 1980
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Personnel Review
- Vol. 9 (2) , 5-8
- https://doi.org/10.1108/eb055404
Abstract
In Part I of this paper we reported the main findings of a survey of the literature on occupational stress. We were particularly concerned to try to estimate the size of the problem of stress at work and, further, to see if different occupational groups experienced different degrees of stress. The oversimplified answers to these questions are that at any one time about eight per cent of the workforce are experiencing some distress and that greater proportions of the lower social classes experience more of it. Repetitive, machine-minding type tasks appear to be particularly unpleasant and potentially harmful to health and well-being. These findings were hedged about with reservations on the validity of the measures used and other doubts, and we concluded the paper with the comment that it was difficult to integrate and make sense of all these data without some better definitions of the concepts and a model for delineating the relationships of the concepts. This second part at-tempts to deal with these two difficulties.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stress and Work: A Review and Theoretical Framework, IPersonnel Review, 1980
- The Structure of CopingJournal of Health and Social Behavior, 1978
- The Experience of Losing a Job: Reported Changes in Health, Symptoms and Illness BehaviorPsychosomatic Medicine, 1975
- Changes in the Serum Cholesterol and Blood Clotting Time in Men Subjected to Cyclic Variation of Occupational StressCirculation, 1958