An examination of stressors, strain and resilience in academic and non-academic UK university job roles

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Abstract

Recent years have seen changes within the academic profession including decreased perceptions of autonomy and job security, increasing student numbers and teaching quality focus, and greater emphasis on high quality research outputs. Such changes arguably lead to increased workplace stress and, given the potential negative impact of high workplace stress levels on health and work-related outcomes, a consideration of stressors and strain within academia is timely. In this paper we compared stressors and strain across UK academic and non-academic university job roles. The paper also determines which stressors are the strongest drivers of poor health; and considers the role of resilience in the stressor strain relationship. The sample consisted of participants from three UK universities using the ASSET stress measure which gives information on eight stressors and two measures of strain (psychological and physical ill-health). As data sets varied across organizations, different sub-samples were used for analysis with sample sizes of N=2779 to N=652 with the majority of the analysis using the smaller sample. Academics reported better physical health, higher levels of work overload, poorer work-life balance, better job conditions and work relationships, and less concern about pay and benefits in comparison to non-academic employees. For both academic and non-academic staff the stressors work-life balance and aspects of the job were associated with psychological and physical ill-health, and stressors that impact ill-health did not differ by job type. Resilience had a direct effect on psychological and physical ill-health as well as an indirect effect by influencing perceptions of stressors.
Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Stress Management
Volume26
Issue number2
Early online date1 May 2019
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Keywords

  • workplace stress
  • resilience
  • health
  • mediation
  • academic

Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms

  • Manchester Institute for Collaborative Research on Ageing

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