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Occupational Medicine Advance Access originally published online on March 26, 2007
Occupational Medicine 2007 57(3):194-202; doi:10.1093/occmed/kqm013
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Occupational Medicine. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Factors associated with psychiatric morbidity in Spanish schoolteachers

Obdulia Moreno-Abril1, Juan de Dios Luna-del-Castillo2, Carmen Fernández-Molina1, Dolores Jurado1, Manuel Gurpegui3, Pablo Lardelli-Claret1 and Ramón Gálvez-Vargas1

1 Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
2 Department of Statistics, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
3 Department of Psychiatry and Institute of Neurosciences, University of Granada, Granada, Spain

Background The relationship between psychiatric morbidity and characteristics of the work environment has been well-documented, and one of the professional groups in which psychiatric symptoms are most common is schoolteachers.

Aims The present study was designed to evaluate the association between psychiatric morbidity [measured with General Health Questionnaire (GHQ)-28 score] and workplace-, sociodemographic- and personality-related variables in schoolteachers.

Methods A sample of 498 non-university teachers in the city of Granada (southern Spain) were studied with a questionnaire comprising items that covered work-related variables (work and professional variables, as well as job perceptions), sociodemographic characteristics of the teachers and personality, evaluated with the Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI-125). The dependent variable was psychiatric morbidity, measured as scores >6 on the GHQ-28. Crude and adjusted odds ratios between each independent variable and psychiatric morbidity were obtained.

Results In the adjusted analysis, psychiatric morbidity was associated with heavy workload, physical assault from pupils, low appraisal by superiors, low job satisfaction, high stress, female gender and (regarding personal characteristics) high scores for harm avoidance and novelty seeking and low scores for self-directedness.

Conclusions When personality characteristics are taken into account, the effect of workplace and sociodemographic variables was limited, although workload, poor job satisfaction and female sex remained associated with psychiatric morbidity.

Keywords      Mental health; occupational stress; teachers


Correspondence to: Obdulia Moreno-Abril, Departamento de Medicina Preventiva y Salud Pública, Facultad de Medicina, Avenida de Madrid 11, E-18012 Granada, Spain. Tel: 34 958 249617; fax: 34 958 249958; e-mail: omoreno{at}ugr.es


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