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Les survivants vers une gestion différenciée des ressources humaines /François-Philip de Saint Julien, Delphine January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de : Thèse de doctorat : Gestion : Paris 1 : 2002. / Titre provenant de l'écran d'accueil. Bibliogr. p. [381]-401.
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The effects of emotion work on burnout components and burnout's effects on workgroupsChamberlain, Lindsey J. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2009. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 95-102).
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Stress and burnout among cross-trained public safety personnelStarr, Peter N. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Indiana University of Pennsylvania. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Workplace stressors, ways of coping & demographic characteristics as predictors of psychological well-being of HK hospital nursesLam, Ting-chee., 林庭芝. January 2006 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Nursing Studies / Master / Master of Nursing in Advanced Practice
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A study of self-efficacy and burnout among the mental health care workers in the psychiatric services in Hong KongChan, Nga-yee, Zoe., 陳雅怡. January 2009 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Mental Health / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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The impact of adverse work schedules on nurses' fatigueMo, Man-yuen, Jacky., 毛文源. January 2011 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Public Health / Master / Master of Public Health
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Care coordinators' responses to clients' trauma : the role of coping and perceived organisational supportRadford, Rebecca January 2013 (has links)
Research suggests that working with trauma survivors can result in a range of negative effects including ‘vicarious trauma’, ‘secondary trauma’, ‘compassion fatigue’ and ‘burnout’ amongst other things. Although the impact of being exposed to traumatic stories has been investigated in a range of professionals no studies to date have explored the impact of this on UK mental health workers known as care coordinators. The aim of this study was to explore a sample of care coordinators responses to client’s traumatic stories and the role of coping and perceived organisational support. Twelve UK care coordinators (community psychiatric nurses, occupational therapists and social workers) from two NHS mental health recovery teams completed interviews about their experiences of hearing clients’ traumatic experiences. Grounded theory was employed to analyse the interviews. The care coordinators heard traumatic stories in their role and were ‘active participants’ in these disclosures. They also experienced short and long-term levels of distress which included a range of negative emotions, a mixture of positive and negative responses and a broadening of their perspectives on themselves, their clients and the world. Care coordinators also developed a range of individual coping strategies, experienced individual and organisational barriers to seeking support and experienced limited organisational support for hearing traumatic stories. This is the first UK study to investigate care coordinators’ responses to clients’ traumatic experiences. Therefore further exploratory studies are required in addition to studies with larger sample sizes and measures of trauma related symptoms.
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The impact of frequent organizational restructuring on employees' psychological contracts in a government department.Kekana, Mmasello. January 2013 (has links)
M. Tech Business Administration / During the 2010/2011 financial year, the National Department of Human Settlements embarked on its second organisational restructuring effort, in an attempt to align and improve internal departmental performance. It is documented in the academic literature that when organisational change occurs, it impacts on employees. There are, however, few public sector studies of how change affects the psychological contracts of employees. The aim of this research is therefore to add to existing public sector literature by determining whether changes in the National Department of Human Settlements have impacted on employees' psychological contracts in a negative or a positive way. The research seeks to investigate whether the changes have affected employees' trust of their employer, their commitment, dedication, loyalty and career development opportunities.
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The impact of frequent organizational restructuring on employees' psychological contracts in a government department.Kekana, Mmasello. January 2013 (has links)
M. Tech. Business Administration / During the 2010/2011 financial year, the National Department of Human Settlements embarked on its second organisational restructuring effort, in an attempt to align and improve internal departmental performance. It is documented in the academic literature that when organisational change occurs, it impacts on employees. There are, however, few public sector studies of how change affects the psychological contracts of employees. The aim of this research is therefore to add to existing public sector literature by determining whether changes in the National Department of Human Settlements have impacted on employees' psychological contracts in a negative or a positive way. The research seeks to investigate whether the changes have affected employees' trust of their employer, their commitment, dedication, loyalty and career development opportunities.
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Occupational stress and work engagement of dog unit members in the South African police service : a qualitative study.Govender, Preadhashni. January 2012 (has links)
Police officers have a significant role to play in the stability, economic growth, and development of South Africa. Therefore, it is critical for the South African Police Service (SAPS) to have police officers who are engaged in their work. However, given the high levels of crime and violence in South Africa, and the ensuing dangers associated with police work, many of these situations are experienced as stressful, often resulting in psychological distress. On the contrary, some police officers, regardless of the stressful nature of their job, seem to enjoy their work and exert greater effort in dealing with these stressors. The purpose of this study was to provide a qualitative description of occupational stress and work engagement as perceived and experienced by police officers in the SAPS Dog Unit.
The researcher’s interest in this research topic, emanated when, as part of a Psychometry Internship at the SAPS, the researcher was involved in psychometric evaluation of police officers who wanted to join the Dog Unit. The researcher had the opportunity to interview police officers who acknowledged that, despite being aware of the stressful nature of the job, they were willing to deal with these stressors. Furthermore, a comprehensive search of literature revealed that there are no qualitative studies exploring perceptions and experiencesof occupational stress and work engagement of police officers in the Dog Unit. This motivated the researcher to conduct this study to fill in the gap of qualitative research literature.
A qualitative research design was used and the transactional approach to stress formed the theoretical premise of this study. A purposive non-probability sampling technique resulted in10 interviews being conducted with both male and female dog handlers at the SAPS Dog Unit in Durban. The researcher utilised a semi-structured interview schedule and all audio-taped interview data was analysed using thematic content analysis.
The findings of the study suggest that individual differences and situational factors are useful in explaining how stressors produced different reactions in police officers at the Dog Unit based on their cognitive appraisal of work demands. The most common sources of occupational stress experienced by participants include: (a) task related stressors, (b) organisational stressors, and (c) personal stressors. With regard to these stressors, the results suggest that organisational stressors greatly affect participants compared to task-related stressors. With regard to perceptions and experiences of work engagement, the results reveal that perceptions of work engagement spanned over six domains: (a) inner calling, (b) an active choice to become a police officer, (c) to serve and protect, (d) sense of duty, (e) recognition, and (f) to form an identity. Interestingly it was found that the following resources positively influenced work engagement, namely, social support, skills and abilities, peer support, and self-efficacy. In addition, findings suggest that positive appraisals of work situations and being immersed in one’s job significantly influenced participant’s experiences of work engagement. Thus, the findings suggest that adequate resources and positive appraisals can promote engagement even when the conditions for engagement are less than optimal.This study contributes greatly to the evolving body of knowledge on occupational stress and work engagement and provides a unique context specific perspective to understanding how police officers in the Dog Unit perceive and experience occupational stress and work engagement. Prior to the present study, no studies had been undertaken to specifically understand perceptions and experiences of police officers in the Dog Unit. It has become clear that further research in this regard is required to bring about a deeper understanding of the perceptions and experiences of occupational stress and work engagement of police officers in the Dog Unit. The objective being to provide more support to police officers to ensure the stability, economic growth, and development of South Africa. In contrast to studies which show that high job demands and lack of job resources negatively impact employee engagement, findings from this study show that despite being exposed to conditions that are less favourable for engagement, police officers at the Dog Unit are engaged. An understanding of police officer’s perceptions and experiences of occupational stress and work engagement may provide direction for strategies to provide more support to dog handlers and improve work engagement in the Dog Unit. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2012.
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