BookPeter Y. Chen, Department of Psychological Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, AL.
Summary: "A compact, evidence-based overview of occupational stress. The workplace can be a major source of stress, and this can cause health problems that have a negative impact on the individuals, organizational, and society. This concise, evidence-based volume, written by a leading occupational health psychologist, explores how work conditions and organizational characteristics pose threats and harms to people's wellbeing through the lens of occupation stress theories and models. The author then summarizes the potential adverse impacts of major job stressors across individuals, families, organizations, and nations. In a final section, several evidence-based prevention strategies targeting individuals, management, and organizations are explored, including recovery from work, job crafting, and supervisors as change agents. Practitioners can modify and tailor these actionable strategies to assist employees and organizations in managing occupational stress. This book is essential reading for clinical and occupational psychologists, managers, supervisors, and anyone interested in making the workplace a healthier place."-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Description
Theories and models
Job stressors and their impacts
Preventive interventions
Case vignette
Further reading
References
Appendix: Tools and resources.