Pinhatti, Evelin Daiane Gabriel Ribeiro, Renata Perfeito Soares, Marcos Hirata Martins, JĂșlia Trevisan Lacerda, Maria Ribeiro Minor psychiatric disorders in nursing: prevalence and associated factors <div><p>ABSTRACT Objective: to investigate the prevalence of Minor Psychiatric Disorders and associated factors in nursing workers. Method: observational and analytical sectional study. Data were collected from 285 nursing workers. A questionnaire containing sociodemographic, occupational, psychosocial aspects of work and mental health was used. Bivariate and multivariate analysis were performed by binary logistic regression. Results: the global prevalence of suspected Minor Psychiatric Disorders among nursing workers was 32.6%. Higher prevalence rates were found among female, young, married/common-law married individuals, in the nursing assistant/technician categories, with income up to four minimum wages, developing high-demand work with low social support, high effort-reward imbalance, and over-commitment. Conclusion: the variables that remained associated with the mental health outcome in the final model were: female gender, married/common-law married, high-demand work, high effort-reward imbalance, and over-commitment.</p></div> Nursing;Occupational Health;Nursing Research;Working Environment;Mental Disorders 2018-10-24
    https://scielo.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Minor_psychiatric_disorders_in_nursing_prevalence_and_associated_factors/7244018
10.6084/m9.figshare.7244018.v1