Occupational stress and coping behaviors in clerical and secretarial workers

Date
1981
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Description
Abstract

Clerical and secretarial workers completed an openended questionnaire in which they recorded stressful jobrelated incidents. This information was used to construct a behavioral stress scale and coping behaviors inventory. Another group of clerical and secretarial workers (N=282) rated these Incidents according to their perceived stressfulness and categorizéd concomitant coping behaviors. They also listed the occurrence of specific psychosomatic illnesses and filled out a widely-used measure of occupational stress. Factor analytic results suggest that clerical and secretarial workers consider instances of role conflict and interpersonal problems to be the most important job-related stressors. The'average respondent is a moderately stressed woman who employs a range of both action-oriented and cognitive-oriented behaviors, with the cognitive-oriented behaviors predominating slightly. However, as the level of perceived occupational stress increases, the use of action-oriented behaviors rises in this group.

Description
Degree
Master of Arts
Type
Thesis
Keywords
Citation

Stramler, Carlla S.. "Occupational stress and coping behaviors in clerical and secretarial workers." (1981) Master’s Thesis, Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/104734.

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