Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of cases
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The individual in the changing working life: introduction
- Part I Threats and challenges
- Part II Individual attempts at restoring the balance
- 12 Skeleton key or siren song: is coping the answer to balancing work and well-being?
- 13 The dynamic influence of individual characteristics on employee well-being: a review of the theory, research, and future directions
- 14 Stress and coping at work: new research trends and their implications for practice
- 15 Work stress, coping, and gender: implications for health and well-being
- 16 The role of protean career attitude during unemployment and re-employment: a literature review and conceptual model
- Part III Intervention and promotion on the organizational level
- Index
- References
14 - Stress and coping at work: new research trends and their implications for practice
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of cases
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The individual in the changing working life: introduction
- Part I Threats and challenges
- Part II Individual attempts at restoring the balance
- 12 Skeleton key or siren song: is coping the answer to balancing work and well-being?
- 13 The dynamic influence of individual characteristics on employee well-being: a review of the theory, research, and future directions
- 14 Stress and coping at work: new research trends and their implications for practice
- 15 Work stress, coping, and gender: implications for health and well-being
- 16 The role of protean career attitude during unemployment and re-employment: a literature review and conceptual model
- Part III Intervention and promotion on the organizational level
- Index
- References
Summary
Research on work stress and the ways individuals cope with it has a long tradition that has lasted for more than half a century and that has increased dramatically during the last few decades. Work stress is a phenomenon that has often been related to poor well-being at work and to psychosomatic complaints. Its relation to workers’ physical and mental health has also been established (Sonnentag and Frese, 2003). Moreover, stress has negative outcomes for companies because of absence behaviors and low performance. In fact, several authors have reported work stress to be a significant source of labor costs for companies (Cooper, Liukkonen, and Cartwright, 1996; Goetzel et al., 1998).
In recent times, labor markets, organizations, and the nature of work itself have experienced important transformations caused by globalization and social, economic, market, and technological changes. These changes have had an impact on work context, work activities, and workers’ health and well-being. In many facets working conditions have improved, but new risks, most of them of a psychosocial nature, have appeared or intensified. This emerging reality poses new demands and threats for workers and professionals, but it also offers new opportunities for development and personal fulfillment. Stress experiences can hamper employees’ well-being and health, but under certain conditions they can also have beneficial consequences. In fact, as pointed out by Selye (1956), an important distinction can be made between stress that is positive, labeled “eustress,” and negative stress, which is sometimes known as “distress.”
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- Information
- The Individual in the Changing Working Life , pp. 284 - 310Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
References
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