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RSS FeedsIJERPH, Vol. 17, Pages 610: Straining at Work and Its Relationship with Personality Profiles and Individual Consequences in Healthcare Workers (HCWs) (International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health)

 
 

17 january 2020 18:00:57

 
IJERPH, Vol. 17, Pages 610: Straining at Work and Its Relationship with Personality Profiles and Individual Consequences in Healthcare Workers (HCWs) (International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health)
 


Straining is an attenuated form of mobbing, in which the continuity of vexatious actions is not driven by a discriminatory intent. With the objective of testing the possible moderating role of personality in the relationship between perceptions about straining at work and individual consequences, a correlational design research involved 374 healthcare workers (HCWs) from two Italian hospitals. The following questionnaires were administered: (1) Short Negative Acts Questionnaire (S-NAQ), to assess discriminative actions at work); (2) the Italian version of the Big Five Inventory (BFI-10 scale), to assess personality factors; (3) Occupational Stress Indicator (OSI), to measure psychological and physical health. Regression analysis and Structural Equation Models (SEM) were computed in order to test the relationships between variables. Perceived straining showed significant correlations with both psychological and physical health. Conscientiousness was inversely proportional to work-related bullying (WB), as agreeableness was to personal bullying (PB). Emotional stability was negatively correlated with all the three component scales of S-NAQ: WB, PB, and social bullying. The results seem to confirm that straining perceptions especially elicit, through emotional stability, psychological consequences. As regards the role of emotional stability in risk perceptions, it seems management has to pay thorough attention to personal factors in organizational perceptions and to straining actions.


 
272 viewsCategory: Medicine, Pathology, Toxicology
 
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