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. 2016 Apr 20;11:10.3402/qhw.v11.30266. doi: 10.3402/qhw.v11.30266

Table I.

Example of thematic structural analysis.

Meaning unit Condensation Sub-themes Main themes
“Some of them, if you stun them they just look at you and cry… when it cries and then it gives me another thing, of eish (shivering). I like animals and now I am killing the animals. The first week before I started to stun, hey, it was difficult for me.” (RP10) Slaughtering for the first time is very difficult The mental trauma of the first kill Becoming a slaughterer
“Sometimes I saw myself slaughtering the animals, but you see eyes, I saw, eyes of the animal. It's like its watching me. That thing, that dream, I didn't feel well even when I came back to work, but I keep on checking the eyes to see its watching me, because I saw it in the dream. It's not easy for a first time.” (P14) Paranoid dreaming Recurring dreams and nightmares
“In my dream I see the bleeding line, just the cattle hanging on the line, all whose heads are off. I get this picture often. It's not nice to dream about blood; you wake up wet with sweat.” (RP9) Waking up with fear after dreaming about work
“You rather lie than say where you work. You lie to them, you are ashamed where you work. My uncle told me you never say where you work. I was very ashamed, working with blood.” (RP4) Feeling ashamed Experiencing heightened emotive responses (mal)adjusting to the slaughter work
“First, when I see all the blood there, when I looking, my eyes was looking at, aye, I don’t know what I must say, eyes was looking like red river, when they go inside, go to by-product. I am so scared at that time.” (RP11) Feeling afraid
“Maximum six months then you make a change, because if he shoots continuously it will start affecting him. He gets a murderous attitude in him. He will do it to other people. He will stab you with a knife, turn around and walk away.” (RP8) Slaughtering changes you (more aggressive; care less about your actions) Experiencing personality changes
“As time passes, you get used to it. You feel nothing. You can imagine, if you kill a thing a 1000 times over and over, you wouldn't have feelings after a while. It kills you on the inside, an abattoir, it kills you. You can be full of blood, it will not bother you.” (RP8) Emotional detachment Psychological defences Coping with and maintaining the work
“Ensuring that the Muslim community are consuming whatever is wholesome and lawful that makes me very happy, because I’m doing something for the community on one side.” (RP13) Doing meaningful work Finding strength and meaning
“The good thing is that I'm bringing money. I'm putting food on the table.” (RP6) To sustain a living makes it worthwhile Engaging in constructive coping and destructive coping tactics
“Gym helps; gholf and rugby helps me to get rid of my frustrations.” (RP9) Leisure help to cope with frustration
“There are guys who smoke dagga to get strength to do the job. Guys are so aggressive, every afternoon after work they go drinking.” (RP4) Substance abuse
“What I was having was just to hit. I need to hit, especially my girlfriend. Sometimes, even if you think you can make a mistakes you hit him because eh you don't have a heart for him. That is why most people at stunning box, they can do it, they can hit their girlfriends. Say ‘hey, I hit my girlfriend yesterday’, or ‘I beat my wife yesterday’. That things we do it.” (RP5) Violence from the work context spills over to personal life Work-life spill-over Living with the psycho-social consequence of slaughter work
“Some of my friends rejected me after working here. They said I'm a killer, I can't go with them. They say I have a gun and they don't trust me anymore. They were scared of me. They heard me shouting while dreaming about cattle.” (RP10) Experiencing social rejection from friends Experiencing social detachment and isolation