| Literature DB >> 33958968 |
Ely Zarina Samsudin1, Marzuki Isahak2, Sanjay Rampal2, Ismail Rosnah3, Mohd Idzwan Zakaria4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Research suggests that junior doctors often experience workplace bullying, which may have adverse impacts on medical training and delivery of quality healthcare. However, evidence among local population has not been established. The present study aims to examine the prevalence of workplace bullying among Malaysian junior doctors and explore its associated sociodemographic and employment factors.Entities:
Keywords: Occupational Safety and Health; associated factors; junior doctors; prevalence; psychosocial hazard; workplace bullying
Year: 2021 PMID: 33958968 PMCID: PMC8075595 DOI: 10.21315/mjms2021.28.2.13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malays J Med Sci ISSN: 1394-195X
Characteristics of study participants (N = 1,074)
| Variable | Mean ± SD | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 27.0 ± 1.5 | |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 371 (34.6%) | |
| Female | 701 (65.4%) | |
| Ethnicity | ||
| Malay | 710 (66.5%) | |
| Chinese | 159 (14.9%) | |
| Indian | 180 (16.9%) | |
| Others | 18 (1.7%) | |
| Academic graduation by region | ||
| Local | 546 (52.4%) | |
| Western Europe | 56 (5.4%) | |
| Eastern Europe | 104 (10.0%) | |
| Australasia | 14 (1.3%) | |
| Middle East | 181 (17.4%) | |
| East Asia | 2 (0.2%) | |
| South Asia | 56 (5.4%) | |
| Southeast Asia | 83 (8.0%) | |
| English proficiency | ||
| Poor | 5 (0.5%) | |
| Fair | 284 (26.9%) | |
| Good | 567 (53.6%) | |
| Excellent | 201 (19.0%) | |
| Duration working (months) | 15.5 ± 7.0 | |
| Medical specialty group | ||
| Medical | 356 (34.6%) | |
| Surgical | 318 (30.9%) | |
| Mixed | 354 (34.4%) | |
| Type of hospital | ||
| State hospital | 281 (26.2%) | |
| Major specialist hospital | 675 (62.9%) | |
| University hospital | 118 (11.0%) | |
Prevalence of workplace bullying among participants (N = 1,074)
| Method of measuring workplace bullying | Bullied | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| No | Yes | |
| Persistent exposure to negative actions, i.e. scoring > 45 on NAQ-R | 644 (61.9%) | 397 (38.1%) |
| Persistent exposure to negative actions, i.e. exposure to at least one negative action on a weekly or daily basis for the past 6 months | 588 (56.5%) | 453 (43.5%) |
| Persistent exposure to negative actions, i.e. exposure to at least two negative actions on a weekly or daily basis for the past 6 months | 688 (66.1%) | 353 (33.9%) |
| Perceive to be bullied according to bullying definition given | 878 (84.3%) | 164 (15.7%) |
| 889 (86.7%) | 136 | |
Notes:
based on behavioural experience method and NAQ-R cut-off
based on behavioural experience method and scores; Leymann’s criterion;
based on behavioural experience method and Mikkelsen and Einarsen’s criterion;
based on self-labelling with definition method;
based on combination method (methods A and D)
Types of workplace bullying experienced by participants (N = 1,074)
| Types of negative actions | Never, now and then or monthly | Weekly or daily |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Someone withholding information which affects your performance | 959 (90.8%) | 97 (9.2%) |
| 2. Being humiliated or ridiculed in connection with your work | 881 (83.4%) | 175 (16.6%) |
| 3. Being ordered to do work below your level of competence | 833 (79.2%) | 219 (20.8%) |
| 4. Having key areas of responsibility removed or replaced with more trivial or unpleasant tasks | 884 (84.8%) | 171 (16.2%) |
| 5. Spreading gossip about you | 914 (86.6%) | 141 (13.4%) |
| 6. Being ignored or excluded | 945 (89.6%) | 110 (10.4%) |
| 7. Having insulting or offensive remarks made about your person, attitudes, or private life | 942 (89.3%) | 113 (10.7%) |
| 8. Being shouted at or being target of spontaneous anger | 885 (83.9%) | 170 (16.1%) |
| 9. Intimidating behaviours such as finger-pointing, invasion of personal space, shoving, blocking your way | 922 (87.5%) | 132 (12.5%) |
| 10. Hints or signals from others that you should quit your job | 978 (92.5%) | 79 (7.5%) |
| 11. Repeated reminders of your errors or mistakes | 926 (87.6%) | 131 (12.4%) |
| 12. Being ignored or facing a hostile reaction when you approach | 946 (89.5%) | 111 (10.5%) |
| 13. Persistent criticism of your work and effort | 932 (88.3%) | 124 (11.7%) |
| 14. Having your opinions ignored | 939 (88.8%) | 118 (11.2%) |
| 15. Practical jokes carried out by people you do not get along with | 967 (91.5%) | 90 (8.5%) |
| 16. Being given tasks with unreasonable deadlines | 944 (89.3%) | 113 (10.7%) |
| 17. Having allegations made against you | 986 (93.4%) | 70 (6.6%) |
| 18. Excessive monitoring of your work | 947 (89.9%) | 107 (10.1%) |
| 19. Pressure to not claim something to which by right you are entitled to | 896 (85.0%) | 158 (15.0%) |
| 20. Being the subject of excessive teasing and sarcasm | 953 (90.3%) | 103 (9.7%) |
| 21. Being exposed to unmanageable workload | 904 (85.5%) | 153 (14.5%) |
| 22. Threats of violence or physical abuse or actual abuse | 1,001 (94.7%) | 56 (5.3%) |
Commonest perpetrator of negative actions reported by participants (N = 1,074)
| Source | Perpetrator of negative actions | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| No | Yes | |
| Consultants and specialists | 782 (72.8%) | 292 (27.2%) |
| Medical officers | 439 (40.9%) | 635 (59.1%) |
| House officers | 890 (82.9%) | 184 (17.1%) |
| Nurses and support staff | 741 (69.0%) | 333 (31.0%) |
| Administrative and non-clinical staff | 1,030 (95.9%) | 44 (4.1%) |
Association of sociodemographic and employment factors with workplace bullying (N = 1,025)
| Variables | COR (95% CI) | AOR (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 0.91 (0.79, 1.04) | 0.156 | 0.91 (0.78, 1.07) | 0.239 |
| Gender | n/s | |||
| Male | 1.00 (ref) | |||
| Female | 0.83 (0.57, 1.21) | 0.344 | ||
| Ethnicity | ||||
| Malay | 1.00 (ref) | 1.00 (ref) | ||
| Chinese | 1.08 (0.63, 1.85) | 0.772 | 1.00 (0.54, 1.85) | 0.996 |
| Indian | 1.69 (0.97, 2.93) | 0.063 | ||
| Others | 1.50 (0.43, 5.31) | 0.526 | 1.76 (0.46, 6.67) | 0.408 |
| Education region | ||||
| Local | 1.00 (ref) | 1.00 (ref) | ||
| Western Europe | 1.46 (0.68, 3.13) | 0.333 | 2.10 (0.94, 4.69) | 0.069 |
| Eastern Europe | 2.04 (1.18, 3.50) | 0.010 | 2.27 (1.27, 4.07) | 0.006 |
| Australasia | 1.19 (0.26, 5.43) | 0.825 | 1.57 (0.32, 7.69) | 0.578 |
| Middle East | 0.87 (0.51, 1.50) | 0.625 | 1.15 (0.61, 2.14) | 0.670 |
| East Asia | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| South Asia | 0.89 (0.37, 2.16) | 0.798 | 0.80 (0.30, 2.17) | 0.664 |
| Southeast Asia | 0.67 (0.30, 1.53) | 0.344 | 0.83 (0.35, 1.97) | 0.680 |
| English proficiency | ||||
| Poor | 1.00 (ref) | 1.00 (ref) | ||
| Fair | 0.24 (0.04, 1.49) | 0.125 | 0.20 (0.03, 1.37) | 0.101 |
| Good | 0.19 (0.03, 1.17) | 0.074 | ||
| Excellent | 0.31 (0.05, 1.95) | 0.213 | 0.21 (0.03, 1.44) | 0.112 |
| Duration working | 0.98 (0.95, 1.01) | 0.122 | 0.99 (0.96, 1.02) | 0.606 |
| Specialty group | ||||
| Medical | 1.00 (ref) | 1.00 (ref) | ||
| Surgical | 1.78 (1.13, 2.81) | 0.012 | 1.83 (1.13, 2.97) | 0.014 |
| Mixed | 1.00 (0.62, 1.64) | 0.989 | 1.10 (0.64, 1.88) | 0.737 |
| Type of hospital | n/s | |||
| SH | 1.00 (ref) | |||
| MSH | 0.82 (0.55, 1.23) | 0.346 | ||
| UH | 0.69 (0.35, 1.37) | 0.291 | ||
Notes: SH = state hospitals; MSH = major specialist hospitals; UH = university hospitals; n/s = non-significant;
COR estimates from simple logistic regression;
AOR estimates from multiple logistic regression;
Insufficient sample size, cell empty; Assumptions of logistic regression have been met and the Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test indicated good fit (P= 0.558)