Gignac Monique A M, Sutton Deborah, Badley Elizabeth M
Arthritis Community Research and Evaluation Institute, Toronto Western Research Unit at the University Health Network, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Arthritis Rheum. 2007 Jun 15;57(5):738-47. doi: 10.1002/art.22788.
To develop a measure of job strain related to differing aspects of working with arthritis and to examine the demographic, illness, work context, and psychosocial variables associated with it.
Study participants were 292 employed individuals with osteoarthritis or inflammatory arthritis. Participants were from wave 3 of a 4-wave longitudinal study examining coping and adaptation efforts used to remain employed. Participants completed an interview-administered structured questionnaire, including a Chronic Illness Job Strain Scale (CIJSS) and questions on demographic (e.g., age, sex), illness and disability (e.g., disease type, pain, activity limitations), work context (e.g., job type, job control), and psychosocial variables (e.g., arthritis-work spillover, coworker/managerial support, job perceptions). Principal component analysis and multiple linear regression were used to analyze the data.
A single factor solution emerged for the CIJSS. The scale had an internal reliability of 0.95. Greater job strain was reported for future uncertainty, balancing multiple roles, and difficulties accepting the disease than for current workplace conditions. Participants with inflammatory arthritis, more frequent severe pain, greater workplace activity limitations, fewer hours of work, less coworker support, and greater arthritis-work spillover reported greater job strain.
The findings underscore the diverse areas that contribute to perceptions of job strain and suggest that existing models of job strain do not adequately capture the stress experienced by individuals working with chronic illnesses or the factors associated with job strain. Measures similar to the CIJSS can enhance the tools researchers and clinicians have available to examine the impact of arthritis in individuals' lives.
制定一种与关节炎工作不同方面相关的工作压力测量方法,并研究与之相关的人口统计学、疾病、工作环境和社会心理变量。
研究参与者为292名患有骨关节炎或炎症性关节炎的在职人员。参与者来自一项四波纵向研究的第三波,该研究考察了为维持就业而采取的应对和适应努力。参与者完成了一份通过访谈进行的结构化问卷,包括慢性病工作压力量表(CIJSS)以及关于人口统计学(如年龄、性别)、疾病和残疾(如疾病类型、疼痛、活动受限)、工作环境(如工作类型、工作控制)和社会心理变量(如关节炎对工作的影响、同事/管理支持、工作认知)的问题。采用主成分分析和多元线性回归分析数据。
CIJSS出现了单一因素解决方案。该量表的内部信度为0.95。与当前工作场所条件相比,未来不确定性、平衡多种角色以及接受疾病困难方面报告的工作压力更大。患有炎症性关节炎、更频繁出现严重疼痛、工作场所活动受限更多、工作时间更少、同事支持更少以及关节炎对工作影响更大的参与者报告的工作压力更大。
研究结果强调了导致工作压力认知的不同领域,并表明现有的工作压力模型不能充分捕捉患有慢性病的个体所经历的压力或与工作压力相关的因素。与CIJSS类似的测量方法可以增强研究人员和临床医生用于研究关节炎对个体生活影响的工具。