Sökning: "arbetsmiljö och stress"
Visar resultat 1 - 5 av 25 avhandlingar innehållade orden arbetsmiljö och stress.
1. Gendered experiences of work environment : A study of stress and ambiguity among dental students in Sweden
Sammanfattning : This thesis explores how dental students experience their education. We aim to generate ways to understand which elements relate to the students’ experience based on current theories and models regarding the quality of working life and gender (and) power relations. LÄS MER
2. OM FRISKVÅRDSPEDAGOGIK I ARBETSLIVET. : EN O/RÄTTVIS BETRAKTELSE
Sammanfattning : I fokus för detta arbete står friskvård inom arbetslivet som pedagogisk praktik med hälsoprofilsbedömning, en metod för undersökning och påverkan av människors hälsostatus och hälsovanor, som konkret exempel. En bakgrund till detta är framväxten av insatser för folkhälsa och den ökade betoning av friskvård inom arbetslivet som skett inom såväl privat som offentlig sektor. LÄS MER
3. En god visuell arbetsmiljö : ögonbesvär, muskuloskeletala besvär och produktivitet hos brevbärare
Sammanfattning : This study appears to be one of few intervention studies with focus on eyestrain and lighting on non-computer workplaces. Previous studies have shown strong connections between eyestrain and musculoskeletal strain. LÄS MER
4. Change agents and use of visual management tools in care process redesign : Implications on working conditions for operative managers and healthcare professionals
Sammanfattning : Swedish healthcare has been subject to change efforts to increase efficiency in care processes. In the 2000-2010’s lean production has influenced healthcare with change approaches such as visual management tools to increase patient flows and efficiency. LÄS MER
5. An Epidemiological Study of Exhaustion in the Context of Chronic stress. Concept, Cortisol, Causes and Consequences
Sammanfattning : The interest in exhaustion has increased rapidly during the last few decades in many developed countries. In Sweden, prevalence of exhaustion increased by 50 percent on average between 1989 and 2005, and recent data reveals that exhaustion still remains at this higher level. Scientifically, exhaustion is not clearly defined. LÄS MER