883 resultados para Occupational health psychology
Resumo:
Research has shown that accumulating 10 000 steps/day provides a range of significant clinical health benefits. However, opportunities for daily walking are constrained by a number of barriers, including employment in sedentary occupations.
Resumo:
Empathic engagement by the trauma therapist with another person's traumatic experiences is believed to create risks for the helping professional. Much attention has been focused upon the mental health professional experiencing symptoms of distress as a result of their exposure to the material of clients who survive traumatic incidents. This thesis contains the findings of a qualitative study that centres on a group of male mental health professionals and their experiences of exposure to the trauma material of survivor clients. The participants of the study practise within an internal Employee Assistance Program that provides, among other duties, a 24 hour, 7 day response to critical incidents to a heavy transport industry. Using semi-structured, in-depth interviews, the effects on the trauma therapists are explored by analysing their reactions to their survivor clients' accounts, the impact of these experiences upon their psychological schema, the organisational culture in which they practise and its influence upon their experiences and the methods participants use to cope with the psychological effects of exposure to trauma material. Participants' experiences are closely examined for critical comparisons with vicarious traumatization. Therapists' responses reveal their continued ability and motivation to empathically engage with the trauma material of survivor clients despite the potential risks.
Resumo:
O presente estudo buscou investigar o impacto da resiliência e da autoeficácia sobre o burnout em profissionais de enfermagem. O constructo resiliência no contexto do trabalho refere-se a capacidade de adaptação de forma positiva frente às adversidades que ocorrem no ambiente laboral. A autoeficácia no trabalho representa a percepção do indivíduo sobre as suas próprias competências na execução de tarefas. Já o burnout é compreendido como uma síndrome específica do meio laboral como consequência da cronificação do estresse ocupacional, apresentando três dimensões: a exaustão, o cinismo (despersonalização) e a baixa realização profissional. A amostra da pesquisa foi composta por 82 trabalhadores da área de enfermagem que trabalham em Unidades de Pronto Atendimento UPA s localizadas no estado do Acre. A maior parte dos participantes é do sexo feminino (78%), com idade média de 31 anos (DP=6,8). Para a mensuração das variáveis foram utilizadas a Escala de Resiliência no Trabalho, a Escala de Autoeficácia no Trabalho e a Escala de Caracterização do Burnout, e para coletar os dados sociodemográficos foi aplicado um questionário de autorresposta construído para este estudo. Os dados foram submetidos a análises exploratórias e descritivas, análise de variância (ANOVA), análise de correlação de Pearson e regressão linear múltipla padrão. Os resultados indicaram que os profissionais de enfermagem apresentaram níveis médios de resiliência, autoeficácia e dos componentes exaustão e baixa realização profissional do burnout; e, por sua vez, baixo nível de despersonalização. Constatou-se também correlação entre autoeficácia com dois dos três fatores do burnout: exaustão emocional e decepção no trabalho. Os achados ainda revelaram que resiliência e autoeficácia conjuntamente predizem significativamente ambos os fatores de burnout, exaustão e decepção. No entanto, a variável responsável por esta explicação foi autoeficácia no trabalho, pois apenas ela foi estatisticamente significante para explicar os dois componentes do burnout relatados. Conclui-se que os profissionais que apresentam maior autoeficácia são os que menos sucumbem ao burnout, essa síndrome tão devastadora que ataca de maneira impiedosa os profissionais que lidam no atendimento às pessoas.
Resumo:
Neuroimaging is increasingly used to understand conditions like stroke and epilepsy. However, there is growing recognition that neuroimaging can raise ethical issues. We used interpretative phenomenological analysis to analyse interview data pre-and post-scan to explore these ethical issues. Findings show participants can become anxious prior to scanning and the protocol for managing incidental findings is unclear. Participants lacked a frame of reference to contextualize their expectations and often drew on medical narratives. Recommendations to reduce anxiety include dialogue between researcher and participant to clarify understanding during consent and the use of a `virtual tour' of the neuroimaging experience.
Resumo:
This survey collected information on aspects of health amongst an employed population, employees in 14 different organisations in the West Midlands Regional Health Authority; and was a stratified sample of senior managers, middle managers and operatives. Nine hundred and sixty questionnaires were distributed asking for both quantitative and qualitative information on 58 questions covering health, work, family, leisure activities and life-style. A response rate of 48% (459 returned questionnaires) came from 290 men (63%), 165 women (36%) and four people (1%) who did not answer the gender question. The initial findings from this study are unique in that there has not been a specific review of the health of people at work. In answer to the main research questions, 92% felt they were healthy. Compared to others of a similar age, 34% felt their health was `above average', 58% `average', and 7&37 `below average'. Thirty two percent of respondents had visited their GP in the past 1-2 months; the highest reason given was disorders of the respiratory system, 20%. People's perceptions on the effects of work on their health were: good effect, 13% fair effect, 20% no effect, 27% poor effect, 27% and bad effect, 7%. The effects of leisure activities on health were thought to be more positive: good effect, 46% fair effect, 20% no effect, 21% poor effect, 3% and bad effect, 2%. The perceptions of effects of life-style on health were considered to be: good effect, 32% fair effect, 32% no effect, 20% poor effect, 9% and bad effect, 1%. In this survey, leisure and life-style were seen by employees to have more beneficial effects on health than work. Future implications include a review of occupational health as a major policy development area within primary care. There is a need to influence the education and training of health care practitioners in order to affect their ability to practise effectively in this new and challenging area of work.
Resumo:
The thesis examines the system of occupational health and safety in France. It analyses the use of expert manpower in the field with a view to establishing the possibility of a profession in health and safety. An input-output model is developed to bring together the necessary elements of prevention of accidents and occupational diseases. The role of institutions concerned with health and safety is analysed with reference to this model. The research establishes the need for a health and safety specialist role. The recognition and status of this role are found to be subject to other criteria including the acceptance by institutions of such a specialist role. The model is also used to define the role of this specialist as expected by the various institutions intervening in the field.