Occupational Stress: A Handbook

Occupational Stress: A Handbook

Occupational Stress: A Handbook

Occupational Stress: A Handbook

eBook

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Overview

Bringing together renowned scholars, this handbook contains innovative current empirical and theoretical research in the area of job stress. The workplace is one of the major sources of stress in an individual's life. Placing this important topic in the context of a transactional process, this work is intended to be of use to practitioners working in clinical, organisational, family and health psychology, mental health, substance abuse, the military, and with families and women.; Chapters are arranged in five parts, the first considering theoretical approaches with an introductory article by Professor Emeritus Richard S. Lazarus. Next is an examination of various model testing formats, followed by a section on occupational stress research and coping mechanisms. Fourth is a collection of articles on the subject of burnout, and the book closes with two distinct interventions directed at stress reduction.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781000153989
Publisher: CRC Press
Publication date: 10/28/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 324
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

After receiving a Ph.D. in Social Psychology from the University of Michigan, Rick Crandall taught psychology, business, and research at the University of Mic higan, the University of Illinois, and Tex,is Christian University. Now publisher and founding editor of the journal of Social Behavior and Personality and editor and marketing columnist for Executive Edge (a middle management newsletter), he also teaches popular seminars on business, marketing, and entrepreneurship. The managing editor of a number of academic books including Work and Family, lob Stress, and Type‘ A Behavior, Dr. Crandall's latest popular book is Marketing Your Services for People Who Hate to Sell. Dr. Pamela L. Perrewe is Associate Professor and Chairman of the Department of Management in the College of Business at Florida State1 University. Her primary research h interests are in work and non-work stress, motivation, and personality. A nationally known authority on occupational stress, Dr. Perrewe has published over thirty journal articles in the organizational behavior field. She has recently co-authored a textbook entitled Strategic Human Resource Management.

Table of Contents

Contributors -- Foreword -- PART ONE: -- THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES IN OCCUPATIONAL STRESS RESEARCH -- Psychological Stress in the Workplace Richard S. Lazarus -- Psychological Stress and the Workplace: A Brief Comment on Lazarus’ Outlook Arthur P. Brief and Jennifer M. George -- An Examination of the Transaction Approach in Occupational Stress Research James R. Harris -- Work Stress Conceived and Researched Transact ionally David F. Barone -- Unstructured Perceptions of Work-Related Stress: An Exploratory Qualitative Study Vincent Di Salvo, Charles Lubbers, Ana M. Rossi, and James Lewis -- Measuring Occupational Stress: The Job Stress Survey -- Charles D. Spielberger and Eric C. Reheiser -- PART TWO: SOURCES AND CONSEQUENCES OF -- OCCUPATIONAL STRESS: MODEL TESTING -- Antecedents and Organizational Effectiveness Outcomes of Employee Stress and Health -- William H. Hendrix, Timothy P. Summers, -- Terry L. Leap, and Robert P. Steel -- Coping with Stressful Life Events: An Empirical Analysis -- Rabi S. Bhagat, Stephen M. Allie, and David L. Ford, Jr. -- A Field Study of Some Antecedents and 1 -- Consequences of Felt Job Stress Timothy P. Summers, Thomas A. DeCotiis, and Angelo S. DeNisi -- Relationship of Work and Family Stressors to 1 -- Psychological Distress: The Independent Moderating Influence of Social Support, -- Mastery, Active Coping, and Self-Focused Attention -- Michael R. Frone, Marcia Russell, and M. Lynne Cooper -- PART THREE: THE ROLES OF COPING AND DISPOSITIOI INFLUENCES IN OCCUPATIONAL STRESS RESEARCH -- The Impact of Persistence on the Stressor-Strain and Strain-lntentions to Leave Relationships: -- A Field Examination -- Wayne A. Hochwarter, Pamela L. Perrewe, and Russell L Kent -- The Moderating Effects of Self-Esteem on the Work Stress-Employee Health Relationship Daniel C. Ganster and John Schaubroeck -- Coping with Work Stress: The Influence of Individual Differences -- Stephen J. Havlovic and John P. Keenan -- Job Stress, Coping, and Dissatisfaction in the Health Professions: A Comparison of Nurses and Pharmacists Alan P. Wolfgang -- PART FOUR: AN EXAMINATION OF BURNOUT -- The Purpose of Burnout: A Jungian -- Interpretation -- Anna-Maria Garden -- Individual, Organizational and Social Determinants of Managerial Burnout: Theoretical and Empirical Update Shimon L. Dolan -- The Relationship between Social Support and Burnout Over Time in Teachers -- Esther R. Greenglass, Lisa Fiksenbaum, and Ronald J. Burke -- Burnout and Coping Strategies: A Comparative Study of Ward Nurses E. Dara Ogus -- Measuring Burnout: An Updated Reliability and Convergent Validity Study Kevin. Corcoran -- PART FIVE: INTERVENTIONS AIMED AT OCCUPATIONAL -- STRAIN REDUCTION -- The Impact of Stress Counseling at Work Cary L. Cooper and Golnaz Sadri -- Relations Between Exercise and Employee Responses to Work Stressors: A Summary of Two Studies -- Steve M. Jex, Paul E. Spector, David M. Gudanowski, and Ronald A. Newman -- Index
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