Bui Tina, Zackula Rosey, Dugan Katelyn, Ablah Elizabeth
University of Oklahoma at Tulsa, Tulsa, OK.
Office of Research, University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita, Wichita, KS.
Kans J Med. 2021 Feb 12;14(1):42-45. doi: 10.17161/kjm.vol1413424. eCollection 2021.
The primary purpose of this study was to evaluate the association between workplace stress and productivity among employees from worksites participating in a WorkWell KS Well-Being workshop and assess any differences by sex and race.
A multi-site, cross-sectional study was conducted to survey employees across four worksites participating in a WorkWell KS Well Being workshop to assess levels of stress and productivity. Stress was measured by the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) and productivity was measured by the Health and Work Questionnaire (HWQ). Pearson correlations were conducted to measure the association between stress and productivity scores. T-tests evaluated differences in scores by sex and race.
Of the 186 participants who completed the survey, most reported being white (94%), female (85%), married (80%), and having a college degree (74%). A significant inverse relationship was observed between the scores for PSS and HWQ, r = -0.35, p < 0.001; as stress increased, productivity appeared to decrease. Another notable inverse relationship was PSS with Work Satisfaction subscale, r =-0.61, p < 0.001. One difference was observed by sex; males scored significantly higher on the HWQ Supervisor Relations subscale compared with females, 8.4 (SD 2.1) vs. 6.9 (SD 2.7), respectively, p = 0.005.
Scores from PSS and the HWQ appeared to be inversely correlated; higher stress scores were associated significantly with lower productivity scores. This negative association was observed for all HWQ subscales, but was especially strong for work satisfaction. This study also suggested that males may have better supervisor relations compared with females, although no differences between sexes were observed by perceived levels of stress.
本研究的主要目的是评估参加“工作健康堪萨斯幸福”研讨会的工作场所员工的工作压力与生产力之间的关联,并按性别和种族评估任何差异。
进行了一项多地点横断面研究,以调查参与“工作健康堪萨斯幸福”研讨会的四个工作场所的员工,以评估压力水平和生产力。压力通过感知压力量表(PSS)测量,生产力通过健康与工作问卷(HWQ)测量。进行Pearson相关性分析以测量压力与生产力得分之间的关联。T检验评估按性别和种族的得分差异。
在完成调查的186名参与者中,大多数报告为白人(94%)、女性(85%)、已婚(80%)且拥有大学学位(74%)。观察到PSS得分与HWQ得分之间存在显著的负相关关系,r = -0.35,p < 0.001;随着压力增加,生产力似乎下降。另一个显著的负相关关系是PSS与工作满意度子量表之间的关系,r = -0.61,p < 0.001。按性别观察到一个差异;男性在HWQ主管关系子量表上的得分显著高于女性,分别为8.4(标准差2.1)和6.9(标准差2.7),p = 0.005。
PSS和HWQ的得分似乎呈负相关;较高的压力得分与较低的生产力得分显著相关。在所有HWQ子量表中均观察到这种负相关,但在工作满意度方面尤为强烈。本研究还表明,与女性相比,男性可能与主管关系更好,尽管在感知压力水平方面未观察到性别差异。