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Journal Article

Citation

Sarigül A, Kaya A, Aziz IA, Yıldırım M, Özok HI, Chirico F, Zaffina S. Front. Public Health 2023; 11: e1254331.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Frontiers Editorial Office)

DOI

10.3389/fpubh.2023.1254331

PMID

37942250

PMCID

PMC10629234

Abstract

Individuals with a satisfactory level of job satisfaction are much less likely to feel hopeless about their future and are more likely to perform efficiently in the workplace. General work stress (i.e., the work-related stress subjectively experienced) is a significant predictor of suicide cognitions. Furthermore, it has been posited that satisfaction and hope are fundamental to life from an existential perspective. We, therefore, tested a hypothetical model of general work stress, suicide cognitions, hopelessness, and job satisfaction. The data were collected from 416 health-care workers through a convenience sampling method. The mediation analysis results revealed significant negative and positive relationships among general work stress, suicide conceptions, hopelessness, and job satisfaction. The findings indicate that hopelessness and job satisfaction have a parallel mediating effect in the relationship between general work stress and suicide cognitions. The result of the study is of great importance, which suggests that interventions to alleviate hopelessness and work stress and to boost the job satisfaction of medical staff may help prevent suicide cognitions.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Health Personnel; Cognition; *Suicide; *Occupational Stress; general work stress; health-care workers; hopelessness; job satisfaction; Job Satisfaction; suicide cognitions

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