| dc.description.abstract |
This cross-sectional study involved 218 female health care workers who completed a
survey assessing work conditions [Effort-Reward Imbalance (ERI) scale and Job Content Questionnaire
(]CQ)], work-family balance (work-family spillover scale), sociodemographic information,
and depressive symptoms [Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) scale].
Results: Path analysis supported the presence of a direct relationship between depressive symptoms
and high effort-reward imbalance, high negative work-family spillover, low positive family to-
work spillover, and low education. The indirect effect of low support from work was mediated
by negative work-to-family spillover and high effort-reward imbalance. The indirect effect of high
effort-reward imbalance was mediated by increased negative work-to-family spillover. The indirect
effect of having children 18 years or younger was mediated by decreased positive family-to work
spillover. An indirect effect of low education was mediated by high effort-reward imbalance
and high negative work-to-family spillover. Conclusions: The association between work conditions and depressive symptomatology is mediated
by increased negative work-to-family spillover. The impact of having young children is mediated
by decreased positive family-to-work spillover. |
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