Job Demands and Job Resources in Human Service
Managerial Work An External Assessment Through
Work Content Analysis
Forfattere
Linda Corin
Institute of Stress Medicine, Region V?stra G?taland and affiliated to the
Department of Sociology and Work Science at University of Gothenburg
Lisa Bj?rk
Institute of Stress Medicine, Region V?stra G?taland and affiliated to the
Department of Sociology and Work Science at University of Gothenburg
Managers? psychosocial working conditions are important for managerial sustainability in the public
sector. The job demands-resources (JD-R) model is a widely applied and well-recognized framework
for measuring psychosocial working conditions. However, there is still a need for methodological contributions
including more objective as well as qualitative ways to assess these conditions. In this study,
job demands and job resources as well as the balance between them was qualitatively and externally
assessed for first-line human service managers using a work content analysis method. Conditions
and actions were focused upon with an external perspective. Special attention was paid to concrete
examples and consequences of work characteristics with predefined criteria and cut-off points to
guide the assessments. The results reveal an imbalance for human service managers between high
levels of job demands and the lack of job resources available to meet these demands. Work overload,
conflicting and unclear goals and tasks, emotional demands, restricted control, and lack of supervisory
and organizational support generally characterized the managerial assignment. The analysis
provided concrete explanations of the current work strain in this group of employees, thereby giving
both short-term and long-term possibilities for improvement of managerial work and sustainability.
Forfatterbiografier
Linda Corin, Institute of Stress Medicine, Region V?stra G?taland and affiliated to the
Department of Sociology and Work Science at University of Gothenburg
PhD
Lisa Bj?rk, Institute of Stress Medicine, Region V?stra G?taland and affiliated to the
Department of Sociology and Work Science at University of Gothenburg