Waypoint Research Institute, Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care, Penetanguishene, ON, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Jan 11;23(1):78. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-14920-0.
Within the last decades, a substantial number of reports have established bullying behaviours as a severe risk to the health and safety of workers. However, in Hungary, the severity of this issue remains largely unknown. Therefore, the current study aimed to 1) determine the prevalence of offensive workplace behaviours in the Hungarian working population and 2) examine the relationship between exposure to these offensive behaviours and certain mental health indicators.
The cross-sectional analyses of the present study are based on a sample of 13,104 active workers being representative of the Hungarian working population according to gender, age, educational level, and 18 occupational sectors. The mid-length version of the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire II (COPSOQ II) was used to measure workplace offensive behaviours (bullying, sexual harassment, threats of violence, and physical violence) in the 12 months preceding the survey. Examined mental health correlates included depressive symptomatology (Beck Depression Inventory), functional somatic symptoms (PHQ-15), perceived stress (Perceived Stress Scale), and general well-being (WHO Well-being Index).
Almost half (48.7%) of the sample reported exposure to some form of offensive behaviour; 37.6% of participants reported occasional-, while 11.1% reported weekly or daily exposure. More women than men were exposed to offensive workplace behaviours, and those targeted the most were individuals aged 18-29 and in companies employing 20-49 employees. Top managers reported the lowest amount of bullying, while unskilled labourers reported the most frequent exposure. A moderately strong relationship was discovered between exposure to workplace offensive behaviours and all indicators of mental health.
Workplace bullying was revealed to be a significant public health concern according to this large, representative data set from Hungary. Strategies to reduce the occurrence and impact of these behaviours on employee health should be a priority for occupational health and safety interventions.
在过去的几十年中,大量报告表明欺凌行为对工人的健康和安全构成了严重威胁。然而,在匈牙利,这个问题的严重程度在很大程度上仍未被了解。因此,本研究旨在:1)确定匈牙利劳动人口中冒犯性工作场所行为的流行程度;2)研究暴露于这些冒犯性行为与某些心理健康指标之间的关系。
本研究的横断面分析基于一个代表匈牙利劳动人口的 13104 名在职人员样本,该样本按性别、年龄、教育程度和 18 个职业部门进行了代表性选择。使用哥本哈根心理社会问卷 II(COPSOQ II)的中长度版本来衡量调查前 12 个月内的工作场所冒犯行为(欺凌、性骚扰、暴力威胁和身体暴力)。所研究的心理健康相关因素包括抑郁症状(贝克抑郁量表)、功能性躯体症状(PHQ-15)、感知压力(感知压力量表)和总体幸福感(世界卫生组织幸福感指数)。
近一半(48.7%)的样本报告曾遭受某种形式的冒犯行为;37.6%的参与者报告偶尔遭受,而 11.1%的参与者报告每周或每天都遭受。与男性相比,更多的女性遭受了工作场所的冒犯行为,而最受攻击的是 18-29 岁的人群和拥有 20-49 名员工的公司。高级经理报告的欺凌行为最少,而非熟练劳动力报告的暴露频率最高。研究发现,暴露于工作场所冒犯行为与所有心理健康指标之间存在中度强关系。
根据这项来自匈牙利的大型代表性数据集,工作场所欺凌行为被认为是一个重大的公共卫生问题。减少这些行为的发生和对员工健康的影响的策略应该成为职业健康和安全干预的重点。