The Positive Side of Occupational Health Psychology [electronic resource] / edited by Marit Christensen, Per Øystein Saksvik, Maria Karanika-Murray.
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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E-Books | MEF eKitap Kütüphanesi | Springer Nature | HF5548.7 -5548.85 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | NATURE | 1419411-1001 |
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GN296 -GN296.5 Remembering the Body Ethical Issues in Body Mapping Research / | GN495.6 The Madhesi Upsurge and the Contested Idea of Nepal | HF5548.7 -5548.85 Psychology of Career Adaptability, Employability and Resilience | HF5548.7 -5548.85 The Positive Side of Occupational Health Psychology | HF5548.7 -5548.85 Workplace Innovation Theory, Research and Practice / | HF5548.7 -5548.85 Organizational Psychology and Evidence-Based Management What Science Says About Practice / | HF5548.7 -5548.85 Educator Stress An Occupational Health Perspective / |
Introduction: What is positive Occupational Health Psychology? -- What is work in an Occupational Health Psychology perspective? -- What is health in an Occupational Health Psychology perspective? -- Explanatory models in Occupational Health Psychology -- The meaning of work -- From absenteeism to presenteeism -- Work engagement and job crafting -- Better work and more health - intervention research and reorganization - healthy change -- Healthy individuals in healthy organizations - Happy productive worker hypothesis.
This book serves as an introduction to the Nordic approach to Occupational Health Psychology and illustrates how this perspective can be transferred to a global audience. It discusses a joining of attitudes from Positive Psychology accompanied by experiences drawn from the Nordic work/life context. Over the decades, Nordic countries have gathered a great deal of experience on the meaningfulness of work, work engagement, presenteeism, absenteeism, job crafting, work family balance, intervention and reorganization. These experiences are explained and offered as a different approach to Occupational Health Psychology, while avoiding the more traditional detrimental topics such as stress, conflict burnout and poor well-being. Instead the authors discuss subjects such as engagement, healthy change, prosperity and welfare and are applied to the current ideas on Occupational Health Science. This book shows that using interdisciplinary observations can help our understanding of modern worker health. It offers gives readers an opportunity to consider how a combination of good work and good health can be stimulated in theory and in practice.
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