Göbel, Julian; Degen, Lukas; Minder, Karen; Rieger, Monika A.; Weltermann, Birgitta M.: Strong Association of Perceived Chronic Stress with Leadership Quality, Work–Privacy Conflict and Quantitative Work Demands : Results of the IMPROVEjob Study. In: Behavioral sciences. 2025, vol. 15, iss. 5, 624, 1-12.
Online-Ausgabe in bonndoc: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/13778
@article{handle:20.500.11811/13778,
author = {{Julian Göbel} and {Lukas Degen} and {Karen Minder} and {Monika A. Rieger} and {Birgitta M. Weltermann}},
title = {Strong Association of Perceived Chronic Stress with Leadership Quality, Work–Privacy Conflict and Quantitative Work Demands : Results of the IMPROVEjob Study},
publisher = {MDPI},
year = 2025,
month = may,

journal = {Behavioral sciences},
volume = 2025, vol. 15,
number = iss. 5, 624,
pages = 1--12,
note = {The health of primary care professionals is crucial for the health of populations. A lower number of general practitioners per 1000 patients correlates with higher patient mortality. Challenging work demands, work–privacy conflict, and poor leadership quality are associated with higher perceived chronic stress and/or burnout in physician populations. However, studies investigating the influence of all three factors in a single quantitative model are lacking. This study analysed the associations between the mentioned parameters and perceived chronic stress among general practice personnel based on baseline data of the cluster-randomized IMPROVEjob study. It comprised 60 German general practices with 366 participants (84 general practice leaders, 28 employed physicians, 254 practice assistants). Perceived chronic stress (TICS-SSCS), leadership quality (LMX-7, FIF), work–privacy conflict (COPSOQ), and quantitative and emotional work demands (COPSOQ) were measured with validated questionnaires. The factors associated with lower perceived chronic stress were identified using a multilevel regression model approach. The model showed a significant association with less work–privacy conflict (p < 0.001, β = 0.31), lower quantitative work demands (p < 0.001, β = 0.28), and good leadership quality (p < 0.001, β = −0.22). Especially transformational leadership with the dimension 'innovation of the leader' was associated with lower perceived chronic stress. The data support the importance of high-quality leadership as a protective factor for perceived chronic stress among general practice personnel, which needs to be considered in future leadership interventions in this setting.},
url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/13778}
}

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