AIDS-phobia, contact with AIDS, and AIDS-related job stress in hospital workers.

J H Pleck, L O'Donnell, C O'Donnell, J Snarey
Author Information
  1. J H Pleck: Department of Psychology, Wheaton College, Norton, MA 02766.

Abstract

In a survey of 237 hospital workers involved in the care of AIDS patients at a major AIDS inpatient-care facility, negative attitudes toward AIDS and AIDS patients (AIDS-phobia) and AIDS-related job stress (AIDS-stress) were common. In multivariate analyses, AIDS-phobia is significantly higher among older staff, those having low contact with AIDS patients (AIDS-contact), and those holding homophobic attitudes. AIDS-phobic attitudes and low AIDS-contact can be interpreted as predicting each other. Finally, AIDS-stress is predicted by low contact with AIDS and AIDS-phobic attitudes.

MeSH Term

Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
Adult
Attitude to Health
Female
Humans
Job Satisfaction
Male
Medical Staff, Hospital
Occupational Diseases
Phobic Disorders
Risk Factors
Stress, Psychological

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0AIDSattitudespatientsAIDS-phobialowcontacthospitalworkersAIDS-relatedjobstressAIDS-stressAIDS-contactAIDS-phobicsurvey237involvedcaremajorinpatient-carefacilitynegativetowardcommonmultivariateanalysessignificantlyhigheramongolderstaffholdinghomophobiccaninterpretedpredictingFinallypredicted

Similar Articles

Cited By