Abstract

This study aimed to analyze the bibliometric characteristics of the publications on occupational stress and highlight key research topics and future trends. The Web of Science Core Collection database was searched to collect publications on occupational stress, from inception to December 9, 2020. Two authors independently screened eligible literature and extracted the data. Bibliometric analyses were performed using VOSviewer 1.6.6 and R 3.6.3 software. Overall, 6,564 publications on occupational stress were included. “Stress,” with a total link strength of 1,252, appeared as the most co-occurrence keyword, followed by “occupational stress,” “job stress,” and “job satisfaction.” All studies were published between 1956 and 2020. Among them, 6,176 (94.35%) papers were written in English, and 4,706 (70.25%) were original articles. The top three Web of Science categories were “public environmental occupational health” (n = 1,711), “psychology, applied” (n = 846), and “psychology, multidisciplinary” (n = 650). The 100 top-cited articles were mentioned a total of 36,145 times, with a median of 361, ranging from 174 to 5,574. The United States was the most productive country, with 1,780 publications. The main partners of the United States were England and China. Three themes of occupational stress research were identified: job satisfaction, burnout, and occupational stress-related health problems. This bibliometric analysis provides a comprehensive understanding of the trends and most influential contributions to the field of occupational stress, thus promoting ideas for future research.

Highlights

  • Occupational stress is the process by which workplace psychological experiences and demands produce both short- and long-term changes in mental and physical health [1]

  • Bibliometric analysis has been firmly established as a scientific specialty and is an integral component of research evaluation methodology, especially within the scientific and applied fields [21]

  • We found that the number of literatures published on occupational stress have increased between 1956 and 2020

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Summary

Introduction

Occupational stress is the process by which workplace psychological experiences and demands (stressors) produce both short- and long-term changes (strains) in mental and physical health [1]. A meta-analysis found that the overall prevalence of occupational stress among nurses working in Iranian hospitals was 60% [3]. Occupational stress is associated with many diseases [1], such as cardiovascular diseases [4, 5], depression [6], and type 2 diabetes [7]. Occupational stress is closely related to insomnia [8], alcoholism [9], smoking [10], and unhealthy weight fluctuations [11], which further affect physical and mental health.

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