Table 5.
Work factors | Somatic department (adults) | Psychiatric department (adults) | Paediatric department |
Quantitative work demands | 1.64 ** | 0.27 ** | 0.82 |
Positioning patients in bed | 1.27 * | 0.06 ** | 0.13 ** |
Supporting patients between bed and chair | 0.82 | 0.06 ** | 0.08 ** |
Handling heavy objects | 1.30 * | 0.19 ** | 0.82 |
Positive challenges | 1.45 ** | 1.59 ** | 1.80 * |
Role conflicts | 0.79 * | 0.63 ** | 0.52 * |
Exposure to threats or violence | 0.23 ** | 6.09 ** | 0.075 ** |
Control of work pace | 0.59 ** | 1.90 ** | 0.71 |
Participation in important decisions | 0.80 * | 1.68 ** | 0.86 |
The figures are odds ratios, adjusted for age, gender, and marital status, and where respondents who were not working in the noted practice area have been used as reference category. For example, the figure in the upper left corner (1.64) shows that the odds of reporting a high value of quantitative work demands were 64 % higher in somatic departments than in other practice areas all together. * P < 0.01; ** P < 0.001.