影响澳大利亚男性和女性建筑工人心理健康的工作相关因素比较研究

M. Tennakoon, A. Samaraweera, T. Colangelo, Saurabh Sharma, J. Tiller, J. Zeller, S. Gallage
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摘要

长期以来,人们一直认为建筑行业对体力的要求很高,很少考虑建筑工人的心理健康。越来越多的心理健康问题促使研究将重点从工作健康、安全和事故预防扩展到对工人福祉的“生理社会效应”。因此,本研究旨在探讨工作相关因素对男女建筑工人心理健康的影响。在进行了全面的文献综述以确定背景后,采用了定性研究方法作为研究方法。对两个案例中的16名参与者进行了采访,样本是澳大利亚男性和女性建筑工人的平等代表。通过对案例研究结果的内容分析,将影响心理健康的因素划分为五个主题,包括行业文化的大男子主义特征;高风险、快节奏的工作环境;金融稳定与金融素养;工作量不均,工作时间超长;以及雇主管理人员在保证心理健康方面的参与。关键的含义是,澳大利亚建筑业同样固有的大男子主义文化特征明显影响着男性和女性建筑工人的心理健康。临时和合同约定的不可预测性导致男性员工的工作安全性和财务稳定性较低,从而导致财务压力。本研究强调,以一站式方法解决男女建筑工人的心理健康问题是无效的,并建议在研究的新主题下进一步深入研究。
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Comparative study of work-related factors affecting mental well-being of male and female construction workers in Australia
The construction industry is long perceived as physically demanding, and less consideration has been given to the mental well-being of the construction workers. The increasing number of mental health concerns urges the research to expand their focus from work health, safety and accident prevention to the “physio-social effects” on workers’ well-being. Hence, this research aims to explore the effect of work-related factors on the mental well-being of male and female construction workers. After a thorough literature review to set the background, a qualitative research approach was adopted as the methodology. Sixteen participants across two cases were interviewed, and the sample is an equal representation of male and female construction workers in Australia. Factors affecting mental well-being are recognised under five themes through the content analysis of the case study results, including the machoism characteristics of the industry culture; the high-risk and fast-paced work environment; financial stability and financial literacy; uneven workload and unconventionally long working hours; and the involvement of the employer’s management in reassuring the mental well-being. The key implication is that the same inherent machismo cultural characteristics of the Australian construction industry distinctly affect the mental well-being of male and female construction workers. The unpredictability of casual and contract-based appointments causes low job security and financial stability among male workers leading to financial stress. The current study emphasises that a one-stop approach to address the mental health issues of male and female construction workers is ineffective and proposes further in-depth research under the emerged themes of the research.
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