Occupational stress and work capacity of nurses of a hospital group

Authors

  • Christian Negeliskii Centro Universitário FEEVALE
  • Liana Lautert Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; Escola de Enfermagem

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-11692011000300021

Keywords:

Stress, Physiological, Nurses, Male, Occupational Health, Working Conditions, Nursing Research

Abstract

The study aimed to evaluate the relationship between occupational stress and the work capacity index of 368 nurses (82.1% of the population) of a Hospital Group. A questionnaire with socio-occupational questions was used as well as two scales: the Job Stress Scale and the Work Capacity Index. The group of nurses was predominantly female (93.2%), worked in care activities (63.9%), had undertaken at least one Postgraduate course (76%) and were satisfied with the unit where they worked (70.5%). Occupational stress was present in 23.6% of the nurses, of these 15.2% presented High Strain work and 8.4% Passive Work. Social Support exercised a significant positive influence on all groups - exposed or not to occupational stress. Regarding the Work Capacity, this was Moderate (28-36 points) for 51.4% of the nurses and Good (37-43 points) for 47.4%. There was no correlation between stress and work capacity.

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Published

2011-06-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Occupational stress and work capacity of nurses of a hospital group . (2011). Revista Latino-Americana De Enfermagem, 19(3), 606-613. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-11692011000300021