Occupational Stress among Nurses of Tertiary Care Hospitals in Karachi, Pakistan

Authors

  • Badil B Institute of Nursing, Ojha Campus, Dow University of Health Sciences, Karachi, Pakistan.
  • Hakim Shah Institute of Nursing1 / Research Department3 , Ojha Campus, Dow University of Health Sciences, Karachi, Pakistan.
  • Raza Ur- Rehman Department of Psychiatry, Civil Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan
  • Syed Arif Ali Research Department , Ojha Campus, Dow University of Health Sciences, Karachi, Pakistan
  • Arsalan Siddiqui Institute of Nursing , Ojha Campus, Dow University of Health Sciences, Karachi, Pakistan

Keywords:

Nurses, stress, occupational stress, tertiary care hospitals, Pakistan

Abstract

Objectives:

Stress is physiological and psychological response towards any occurrences. It is very much vital to learn about occupational stress because as it deters health and decreases the quality of work of nurses. The main objective was to determine prevalence, intensity and causes of occupational stress among nurses.

Materials & Methods:

Hospital-based analytical cross-sectional study was conducted from January to November 2015 at two tertiary care teaching hospitals of Karachi. The study was carried out on 265 registered nurses, having valid license by Pakistan Nursing Council. Convenient nonprobability method was used to access subjects. After taking consent, semi-structured and pre-tested occupational stress questionnaire was used to obtain the data. Data was entered and analyzed in SPSS version 21.

Results:

The study results revealed that majority of nurses 125 (47.2%) were between 25 to 30 years of age. Maximum ratio of nurses were female 160(60.4%) and out of them 148(55.8%) were married. Two hundred and one (75.8%) were diploma holders in nursing, while only 2(0.8%) had done their master in nursing. The study participants reported to suffer with job-related stress; mild stress 2.0%, moderate stress 36.5% and severe 61.5%.

Conclusion:

The current research paper gave an awareness of problem-related to occupational stress among Nurses at tertiary care hospitals. The study outcomes established conclusively that an overwhelming portion of nurses population, setting their demographic characteristic aside faced moderate or severe job stress that may cause damaging effect on their professional, interpersonal skills, and social accountabilities.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Bhatia N, Kishore J, Anand T, Jiloha RC. Occupational stress amongst nurses from two tertiary care hospitals in Delhi. Au Med J 2010; 3:731-8.

Demerouti E, Bakker AB, Nachreiner F, Schaufeli WB. A model of burnout and life satisfaction amongst nurses. J Adv Nursing 2000; 32:454-64.

Stacciarini JM, Troccoli BT. Occupational stress and constructive thinking: health and job satisfaction. J Adv Nursing 2004; 46:480-7.

Jaafarpour M, Khani A. Evaluation of the nurses’ job satisfaction, and its association with their moral sensitivities and well-being. J Clin Diagnostic Res 2012; 6:1761.

Murphy F. Stress among nephrology nurses in Northern Ireland. Nephrol Nursing J 2004; 31:423.

Butterworth T, Carson J, Jeacock J, White E, Clements A. Stress, coping, burnout and job satisfaction in British nurses: findings from the clinical supervision evaluation project. Stress Med 1999; 15:27-33.

Hall E. Nurse burnout in a high stress health care environment: prognosis better than expected? 2005.

Wu S, Zhu W, Wang Z, Wang M, Lan Y. Relationship between burnout and occupational stress among nurses in China. J Adv Nursing 2007; 59:233-9.

Park J. T Work stress and job performance. 2007. [Accessed 2015 January 18]. Available from: http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/75-001-x/2007112/ article/10466-eng.pdf

Stordeur S, D'hoore W, Vandenberghe C. Leadership, organizational stress, and emotional exhaustion among hospital nursing staff. J Adv Nurs 2001; 35:533-42.

Nursing Shortage in Pakistan–Human Resource Management in Health Systems. [Accessed 2015 January 10]. Available from: http://blogs.jpmsonline.com/ 2013/08/23/nursing-shortage-in-pakistan-humanresource-management-in-health-systems/

Pakistan Nursing Council. Islamabad: [ Accessed 2015 January 05].Available from: http://www.pnc.org.pk/

Khowaja K, Merchant RJ, Hirani D. Registered nurses perception of work satisfaction at a Tertiary Care University Hospital. J Nurs Manag 2005; 13:32-9.

Wu H, Chi TS, Chen L, Wang L, Jin YP. Occupational stress among hospital nurses: cross-sectional survey. J Adv Nursing 2010; 66:627.

Long CS, Kowang TO, Ping TA, Muthuveloo R. Investigation on the Impact of Job Stressors on Nurses in Malaysia. Asian Soc Sci 2014; 10:67.

Babu GR, Sathyanarayana TN, Ketharam A, Kar SB, Detels R, Perceived occupational stressors and the health sofrware professionals in Bengaluru, India, Quality Report 2015; 20:314-35.

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Stress at work. [Accessed 2014 December 20]. Available

from: http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/99-101/pdfs/99-101.pdf

Al-khasawneh AL, Futa S. The Relationship between Job Stress and Nurses Performance in the Jordanian Hospitals: A Case Study in King Abdullah the Founder Hospital. Asian J Bus Manag 2013; 5:267-75.

Patel MP, A study to assess the effectiveness of Progressive muscle relaxation therapy on stress among staff nurses working in selected hospitals at Vadodara city, IOSR-JNHS 2014; 3:34-59.

Eleni M, Fotini A, Maria M, Loannis ZE, Constantina K, Theodoros CK, Research in occupational stress among nursing staff, a comparative study in Capital and Reginal hospitals, Hellenic J Nursing Sci 2014; 3:9-18.

Arbabisarjou, Azizollah, Ajdari, Zaman, Omeidi, Khaled, Razieh J, The relationship between job stress and performance among the hospital nurses. World Sci J 2013; 2:181.

Chung CE, Kowalski S, Job stress, mentoring, psychological empowerment, and job satisfaction among nursing faculty. J Nurs Educ 2012; 51:381-8.

Obradovic Z, Obradovic A, Skoro IE, Nurses and

burnout syndrome. J Health Sci 2013; 3:60-4

Downloads

Published

2016-12-25

How to Cite

B, B. ., Shah, H. ., Ur- Rehman, R. ., Arif Ali, S. ., & Siddiqui, A. . (2016). Occupational Stress among Nurses of Tertiary Care Hospitals in Karachi, Pakistan. Journal of the Dow University of Health Sciences (JDUHS), 10(3), 96–100. Retrieved from https://jduhs.com/index.php/jduhs/article/view/1392

Issue

Section

Original Articles

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.