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The Relationship between Job Stress and Needlestick Injury among Nurses at a University Hospital
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Ann Occup Environ Med : Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine

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Original Article The Relationship between Job Stress and Needlestick Injury among Nurses at a University Hospital
Hwan Cheol Kim, Yong Kyu Kim, Yeui Cheol Lee, Joo Youn Shin, Jee Na Lee, Jong Han Leem, Shin Goo Park

DOI: https://doi.org/10.35371/kjoem.2005.17.3.216
Published online: September 30, 2005
Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Inha University Hospital, Korea.
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OBJECTIVES
This cross-sectional study investigated the relationship between job stress and needlestick injury the nurses at a University hospital in Incheon, Korea.
METHODS
A questionnaire survey was conducted targeting 476 nurses, of which 320 (67.2%) questionnaires were returned and 256 (53.8%) were regarded as being reliable data for analyses. We estimated the relation of job stress to needlestick injury using univariate and multiple logistic regression analyses.
RESULTS
One hundred sixty-five nurses (64.5%) had suffered at least one needlestick injury (included sharp injuries) during the previous year. After adjusting for potential confounders, we found that the high job control group was less likely than the other group to experience needlestick injury (OR=0.51, 95% CI=0.27-0.97). Job demand and social support, however, were unrelated to needlestick injury. The high job strain group was more likely to experience needlestick injury (OR=2.57, CI=1.13-5.83) than the low job strain group.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results tend to suggest that nurses who were in the low job control or high job strain status were more likely to suffer a high rate of needlestick injury.


Ann Occup Environ Med : Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
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