2013
DOI: 10.1111/bjhp.12040
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Linkages between workplace stressors and quality of care from health professionals' perspective – Macedonian experience

Abstract: What is already known on this subject? Psychosocial stress at work among health professionals is often present and well studied, but relations between job stress and quality of care were rarely examined. Job demands-resources model by Demerouti, Bakker, Nachreiner and Schaufeli (2001), for assessment of job stress includes job demands (working environment, work overload, time pressures, recipient contact, shift work) and job resources (feedback, rewards, job control, participation, job security, supervisor sup… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Subsequent research, some of it using the Areas of Worklife Scale (Leiter & Maslach, 2011), confirmed the relevance of these six areas in describing the characteristics of work experience that differ between environments conducive to burnout and those conducive to work engagement. I was struck when reading the reports in this series to see the relevance of these six areas of worklife to the challenges facing people working in and receiving services from European health care systems in 2014 (as seen in Karadzinska-Bislimovska et al, 2014;McGowan, Humphries, Burke, Conry, & Morgan, 2014;Milosevic, Brborovic, Mustajbegovic, & Montgomery, 2014 and others).…”
Section: Six Areas Of Worklifementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequent research, some of it using the Areas of Worklife Scale (Leiter & Maslach, 2011), confirmed the relevance of these six areas in describing the characteristics of work experience that differ between environments conducive to burnout and those conducive to work engagement. I was struck when reading the reports in this series to see the relevance of these six areas of worklife to the challenges facing people working in and receiving services from European health care systems in 2014 (as seen in Karadzinska-Bislimovska et al, 2014;McGowan, Humphries, Burke, Conry, & Morgan, 2014;Milosevic, Brborovic, Mustajbegovic, & Montgomery, 2014 and others).…”
Section: Six Areas Of Worklifementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In comparison with other occupations, healthcare personnel (especially physicians, nurses, and healthcare assistants) are more prone to burnout due to their exposure to stressors including: thanatophobia (12); interpersonal problems (13); low social support (14); verbal and physical aggression and violence (15,16); poor hospital work environments (17); high workload (18); high number of patients per day (19); decision-making in emergency situations (based on insufficient information) and accepting responsibility for the consequences (20); exertion along with mental pressure to avoid any mistakes (21); and rotating shift work, particularly night work (22). Farsi et al (2014) conducted a study at Army University of Medical Sciences (AJA) hospitals of Tehran, Iran and showed that quality of nurses' working life was reversely related to EE and DPA (23).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While it is difficult to change some factors in low resource settings such as drug stock-outs, lack of training and poor infrastructure, providing existing health workers with coping and stress management techniques to persevere within these difficult environments and manage their emotional health can potentially have an impact on health service delivery and quality of care [14]. Resilience is one such tool, and is particularly important in remote areas and in countries like Sierra Leone where health worker shortages are dire, job satisfaction and motivation are poor, financial incentives are lacking and bottlenecks to quality care are numerous.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resilience, namely the ability to handle stress in a healthy and adaptive way, is a major factor in health worker well-being [13]. Stress can impact the functioning of the health system as a whole with respect to retention, performance, productivity, safety, demand and quality of care [14], and has an overall impact on health worker job satisfaction levels [15]. Teaching stress management and coping skills can prevent burnout, a condition caused by long-term, perpetual stress that leads to emotional exhaustion and one’s diminishing sense of purpose and self [16,17].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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