7-Managing Individual Stress
7-Managing Individual Stress
7-Managing Individual Stress
INDIVIDUAL STRESS
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
What is Stress?
Stress means different things to different people
Stress can be defined as either a stimulus or a response
A stimulus definition of stress is some characteristics or event
of something that result in a disruptive consequence.
Chronic stress – long duration stress – it may last for months and
years
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Stress
Stress behavioral, physical, or
psychological response to stressors
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Hans Selye noted that stress can be caused by both positive and
negative events in one’s life and both types of events can have the
same physical and psychological impact.
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
A Model of Stressors, Stress, and Outcomes
Behavioral
Individual Level
Moderators
Organizational Level Physiological
Nonwork
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Membedakan antara Stressors, Stress & Strain
Cognitive
Appraisal Adverse
Strain Reactions
Stressor (Physical) • Physical
• Threatening ailments
(Physical)
situation Strain
STRESS (Behavioral) • Emotional
• Beyond ailments
Stressor Strain
control • Impaired job
(Psychological) (Psychological)
Performance
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Membedakan antara Stressors, Stress & Strain
Stressor: berbagai macam tuntutan, baik bersifat fisik maupun psikis, yang
dialami selama menjalankan kehidupan
Strain: deviasi dari kondisi normal seseorang bisa berfungsi dengan baik
sebagai akibat dari menghadapai situasi yang penuh dengan tekanan
(stressful) dalam waktu yang lama
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Work Stressors:
Individual, Group, and Organizational
Individual Level
Role conflict, role overload, role ambiguity, responsibility for people,
harassment, pace of change
Group Level
Managerial behavior, lack of cohesiveness, intragroup conflict, status
incongruence
Organizational Level
Environment, technology, management styles, organizational design,
politics, culture
Nonwork
Elder and child care, economy, lack of mobility, volunteer work, quality
of life
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Work Stressors:
Individual, Group, and Organizational (cont.)
Individual Stressors
Role conflict
Work overload
quantitative – having too many things to do or
insufficient time to complete a job
qualitative – occurs when people feel they lack the
ability needed to complete their jobs or their
performance standards have been set too high
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
The Underload and Overload Continuum
Low Low
performance performance
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Coping with Stress
Problem-focused coping
the action taken by an individual to cope with a
stressful person, situation, or event.
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Coping with Stress
Emotion-focused coping
the action taken by a person to alleviate stressful
emotions. The action center on avoidance or escape
from a person, problem, or event.
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
A Model of the Coping Process
Situational Problem
factors focused
coping
Cognitive
Coping
appraisal
Strategies
of stressor
Emotion
focused
Personal
coping
factors
Harmful?
Threatening?
Challenging?
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Stress Outcomes
Positive
e.g. self motivation, and stimulation to satisfy
individual goals and objectives
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Stress Outcomes
Individual Outcomes
Psychological – anxiety, frustration, apathy, lowered self
esteem, aggression, and depression
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Burnout
a psychological process brought about by unrelieved work
stress, resulting in emotional exhaustion,
depersonalization, and feelings of decreased
accomplishment
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
A Model of Burnout
Job &
Personal
organizational
stressors
stressors
Feeling a lack of
Personal accomplishment
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Four factors that are particularly important
contributors to burnout:
High level of work overload
Dead-ends jobs
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Burnout Indicators
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Stress Outcomes
Organizational Consequences
absenteeism, turnover, increased health and
medical costs, and qualitative decrements in
productivity
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
STRESS MODERATORS
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
STRESS MODERATORS
3 important moderators:
Personality
e.g. the Big Five Model (emotional stability, extroversion,
agreeableness, conscientiousness, openness to experience), locus of
control, and self efficacy
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Type A Behavior Pattern
Type A Behavior
Pattern aggressively
involved in a chronic,
determined struggle to
accomplish more in
less time
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Type A Characteristics
1) Hurried speech; explosive accentuation of key
words
2) Tendency to walk, move, or eat rapidly
3) Constant impatience with rate at which most events
take place
4) Strong preference for thinking of or doing two or
more things at once
5) Tendency to turn conversations around to
personally meaningful subjects or themes
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Type A Characteristics
10) Tendency to schedule more and more in less and
less time; a chronic sense of time urgency
11) Feelings of competition rather than compassion
when faced with another Type A person
12) Development of nervous tics or characteristic
gestures
13) A firm belief that success is due to the ability to get
things done faster than the other guy
14) A tendency to view and evaluate personal activities
and the activities of other people in terms of
“numbers” Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
Social Support
Social Support amount of helpfulness derived from social
relationships
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
STRESS PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT
2 dimensions of fit:
the extent to which work provides formal and informal rewards
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
STRESS PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT (cont.)
Reni Rosari
Msi – UGM
STRESS PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT (cont.)
Meditation