Perceived Stress, Rumination and Quality of Sleep Among Rescue 1122 Workers
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.35484/ahss.2022(3-II)45Keywords:
1122, Perceived Stress, Rescue Workers, Rumination, Quality of SleepAbstract
Rescue workers may suffer parallel negative life events such as sleep disturbance, stress, anxiety, low life satisfaction, and other mental health issues. The present study purports to investigate relation between Perceived stress, Rumination and Quality of sleep among rescue 1122 workers and from primary studies of sleep among workers in organizations. Correlational research design was applied and Randomized cluster sampling technique was used to collect the data by using three scales i.e., Perceived Stress Scale, Pain Catastrophizing Scale, and Quality of sleep Scale. The results indicated that the association examination developed a more grounded between Perceived stress and quality of sleep is (r =.375** p=.008 < .01), and there was a positive critical connection amongst Sleep Quality and Rumination (r =.546** p=.000 < .01). The association examination set up a more grounded negative association amongst Job category and Rumination (r = -.245** p=.000 < .05), and also by H4 found a Positive relationship between working shift and sleep Quality (r =.245* p=.000 < .05). According to H5 there was a relationship between working shift and Rumination (r =.217* p=.000 < .05).The conclusion of this research is that perceived stress, rumination and quality of sleep associated negatively with workload and a number of health, attitudinal, and affective outcomes. Despite their theoretical similarity, prominent differences existed in perceived stress, rumination and quality of sleep-in terms of their relationships to many different correlates.
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