Toggle navigation
Join
Login
Home
DVDs
Journals
Online videos
Databases
Posters
Safety tools
Standards
All Words
Any Words
Exact Match
Books
DVDs
Online
Standards
Advanced search
Back to Search Results
Contribution of burnout to the association between job strain and depression : the health 2000 study.
Call no.:
JNL JOU
Find this in:
Journal of occupational and environmental medicine [JOEM]: 2006, 48, n. 10 - October
Year:
2006
Type:
Journal Article
Subject:
Burnout
;
Depression
Copies:
1
Related Items
Related Catalogue Items
Other items related to this item are:
Source
Result
Link
Title
Journal of occupational and environmental medicine [JOEM] [Continues : JOM : journal of occupational medicine]
(Journals)
Similar Items
Challenges and opportunities for preventing depression in the workplace : a review of the evidence supporting workplace factors and interventions.
Differential impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health symptoms and working conditions for senior and junior Doctors in Australian hospitals.
Evolution of posttraumatic symptoms and related factors in Healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic : a longitudinal study.
Stress symptoms, burnout and suicidal thoughts of Finnish physicians.
The Clinical and Occupational Correlates of Work Productivity Loss Among Employed Patients With Depression.
Depression and Occupational Injury : Results of a Pilot Investigation.
Depression and pesticide exposures in female spouses of licensed pesticide applicators in the Agricultural Health Study cohort.
Burnout and functioning of the hypothalamus-pituitary-axis : there are no simple answers.
Psychosocial stress and impaired sleep.
Job stress and depression symptoms in middle-aged workers : prospective results from the Belstress study.