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Measuring the Extent of Impact from Occupational Violence and Bullying on Traumatised Workers
Authors:Claire Mayhew  Paul McCarthy  Duncan Chappell  Michael Quinlan  Michelle Barker  Michael Sheehan
Institution:(1) School of Management, Griffith University, Nathan, Australia;(2) NSW Mental Health Review Tribunal, Australia;(3) School of Industrial Relations and Organisational Behaviour, University of NSW, Australia
Abstract:Across the industrialised world, there is evidence that both the incidence and the severity of occupational violence and bullying are increasingly being reported over time. While there have been few substantive scientific studies in Australia, all the available evidence shows a similar increasing level of risk. It has long been assumed that those who suffer a physical assault during the course of violent events are more likely to be emotionally traumatised by the experience than are those who are merely threatened or bullied at work. However, there are no substantive data published to date. In this paper the authors aim to elucidate and quantify the extent of emotional injury/stress suffered as a result of different forms of occupational violence, based on empirical data collected during face-to-face interviewing of 800 Australian workers employed in the tertiary education, health and long-haul transport industry sectors. The authors conclude that the impact from more covert forms of occupational violence (such as bullying) can, in many instances, at least equal the emotional trauma following assaults on-the-job.
Keywords:occupational violence  bullying  impact on recipients  physical versus emotional injuries
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