Workaholism and negative work-related incidents among nurses

Publication date

2018

Authors

Andreassen, Cecilie Schou
Pallesen, Ståle
Moen, Bente E.
Bjorvatn, Bjørn
Waage, Siri
Schaufeli, WilmarORCID 0000-0002-6070-7150ISNI 0000000081817266

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

The present study comprised 1,781 nurses who participated in an investigation about working conditions, sleep, and health. They answered a questionnaire about age, sex, marital status, children living at home, work hours per week, number of night shifts last year, and total sleep duration and that also included a validated instrument assessing workaholism. In addition, they were asked to report on eight items concerning negative work-related incidents (dozed off at work, dozed while driving, harmed or nearly harmed self, harmed or nearly harmed patients/others, and harmed or nearly harmed equipment). Logistic regression analyses identified several predictors of these specific incidents: Low age (dozed at work, harmed and nearly harmed self, harmed and nearly harmed equipment), male sex (harmed and nearly harmed self, nearly harmed equipment), not living with children (harmed patients/others), low percentage of full-time equivalent (nearly harmed self and harmed patients/others), number of night shifts last year (dozed off at work and while driving, nearly harmed patients/others) and sleep duration (inversely related to dozed off at work and while driving, nearly harmed self). However, the most consistent predictor of negative work-related incidents was workaholism which was positively and significantly associated with all the eight incidents.

Keywords

Negative work-related incidents, Nurses, Sleep, Workaholism, Work hours, Taverne, SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth

Citation

Andreassen, C S, Pallesen, S, Moen, B E, Bjorvatn, B, Waage, S & Schaufeli, W B 2018, 'Workaholism and negative work-related incidents among nurses', Industrial Health, vol. 56, no. 5, pp. 373-381. https://doi.org/10.2486/indhealth.2017-0223