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Barnett, Rosalind C.4
Marshall, Nancy L.1
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Barnett, Rosalind C.; Marshall, Nancy L. – 1989
In spite of general concern about the impact on women's mental health of multiple roles, most studies have examined only the impact of individual roles. This study examined the relationship between multiple-role occupancy and quality and psychological distress in a disproportionate random sample of employed female health care workers (N=403).…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Job Satisfaction, Marriage, Mothers
Barnett, Rosalind C.; And Others – 1989
Previous research on the relationship between workplace stressors and physical health symptoms in men has generated such important insights as the importance of job demand or overload to physical health. However, research on women, work and health raises several necessary additions to the paradigm: (1) a focus on the positive aspects of the…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Family Role, Job Satisfaction, Marriage
Barnett, Rosalind C. – 1988
Research into the experiential determinants of stress-related health measures has progressed dramatically in the last 10 years. Examination of the relationship between life events and psychological distress has been redirected from an early emphasis on major life events to a focus on minor events, i.e., the positive and negative happenings in…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Family Role, Job Satisfaction, Marriage
Barnett, Rosalind C.; And Others – 1989
This study examined work and non-workplace sources of stress in the lives of women (N=403) currently employed as health-care providers. Female licensed practical nurses and social workers were sampled because they met the three criteria determined upon for the study; that is, they were all in high-stress occupations; women predominate in those…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Family Relationship, Females, Longitudinal Studies