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Influence of task demands on occupational stress: gender differences

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Article

García Herrero, Susana ; Mariscal Saldaña, Miguel Angel ; García Rodriguez, Javier ; Ritzel, Dale O.

Journal of Safety Research

2012

43

5-6

365-374

gender ; psychosocial risks ; stress ; working conditions

Psychosocial risks

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsr.2012.10.005

English

Bibliogr.

"Introduction: Occupational stress is a common phenomenon in our society, and generates problems for both workers' health and the functioning of organizations. Over past decades numerous studies have examined occupational stress from the perspective of gender, offering somewhat contradictory results. Some of them found no differences and others indicated that either men or women suffer from greater amounts of occupational stress.

Method: The purpose of this study was to analyze gender differences in stress in situations that involve certain occupational demands. The data used were taken from a random sample population of 11,054 (5,917 men and 5,137 women) from the VI National Survey on Working Conditions (NSWC) which was conducted in Spain in 2007. To carry out this study, a probabilistic model was constructed using Bayesian networks, with the following variables related to task demands: working with tight deadlines, quick work, intellectually demanding work, complicated tasks, repetitive tasks, excessive work, and work demanding high attention levels.

Results: The results of this study reveal that: the indicators studied significantly increased stress levels; women initially had higher stress levels than men; and when exposed to determined task demands, stress differences between genders tended to increase."

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