Abstract

PurposeSocial service employees often fulfill their mandate under tight time schedules, and deal with social stressors. This can result in significant health impairments. By means of one cross-sectional and two intensive longitudinal studies, the present paper aimed to understand how time pressure and social stressors might impact sleep quality. It was also tested whether social stressors amplified the negative association between time pressure and sleep impairments in social workers.MethodsStudy 1 was a cross-sectional questionnaire study on 52 social service employees, while study 2 included a 7-day diary study design (N = 62 social workers) with up to 138 daily measurements. Study 3 applied a 2-week diary and actigraphy assessment, involving a complete social service unit sample (N = 9).ResultsConcerning the moderating role of social stressors, study 1 found social stressors to amplify the effects of time pressure on sleep latency. Multilevel regression analyses of studies 2 and 3 revealed daily time pressure to be a significant predictor of sleep fragmentation the upcoming night. Study 3 further uncovered daily social stressors to positively predicted sleep fragmentation and negatively sleep duration. Study 2 again showed the amplifying interaction effect between daily social stressors and time pressure on sleep fragmentation, but study 3 did not show that interaction.ConclusionThe findings show how job stressors might disturb the sleep quality of social workers also with amplifying risk. Accordingly, social work needs work design prevention efforts that consider the complex inter-play between occupational stressors, as only then recovery processes can be protected.

Highlights

  • Research in social work has increasingly focused on the crucial role that sleep plays in clients’ lives [1]

  • Higher time pressure corresponded to longer sleeponset latencies while higher social stressors corresponded to more frequent early awakening in the morning

  • In line with Hypothesis 5, social stressors significantly amplified the effects of time pressure on difficulties falling asleep (β = 0.55, p < 0.05; see Table 2, Model 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Research in social work has increasingly focused on the crucial role that sleep plays in clients’ lives [1]. Social workers are encouraged to promote clients’ sleep quality to support counseling interventions [2]. 1.1 Time Pressure and Social Stressors in Social Work. Time pressure is a heightened job demand, defined as the extent to which employees feel they need to work faster than usual or lack enough time to complete tasks [5]. Such time pressure is typical in social services due to staff shortages. Empirical knowledge on the daily intrapersonal effects of time pressure on sleep remains sparse

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