Short-term effects of social stressors at work on rumination and physical symptoms in social workers
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
33692221
Description
The present study focuses on social stressors at work and the development of physical symptoms in social workers on a daily basis. In a seven-day diary study it was anticipated that daily rumination functions as a mediator, linked to additional daily physical symptoms in individuals. Before and after work, 81 social workers completed daily questions on social stressors, rumination, and physical symptoms. Multilevel analyses of up to 391 daily measurements revealed that more intense social stressors predicted more rumination, as well as physical symptoms. Rumination anteceded higher physical symptoms. A test of the indirect effects showed a significant indirect path from social stressors at work via rumination to physical symptoms. Hence, it was found that social stressors and rumination contribute to the ongoing health crisis in the social work profession. These findings advance our understanding of the stress mechanisms in social work, as well as point to individual and organizational aspects that occupational health prevention programs should consider.
Date of Publication
2021-09-09
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
Social work
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Social stressors
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Rumination
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Physical symptoms
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Occupational health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Eggli, Andrea | |
Romano-Pereira, Diana |
Additional Credits
Series
Industrial health
Publisher
National Institute of Industrial Health
ISSN
0019-8366
Access(Rights)
open.access