Abstract

BackgroundIn modern society, the scale of the service industry is continuously expanding, and the number of service workers is increasing. Correspondingly, physical and mental problems related to emotional labor are becoming a major social problem. In this study, we investigated the relationship between emotional labor, workplace violence, and depressive symptoms in female bank employees, which is a typical service industry.MethodsIn this study, the Korean Emotional Labor Scale (K-ELS) and Korean Workplace Violence Scale (K-WVS) were distributed to 381 female workers in their 20s at a bank in Seoul, Korea. Data were obtained from 289 subjects (75.9%) and analyzed for 278 respondents, after excluding those with missing responses. We examined the relationship between emotional labor, workplace violence, and depressive symptoms, using multiple logistic regression analysis.ResultsAmong 278 subjects, 27 workers (9.7%) had depressive symptoms. “Emotional disharmony and hurt” (OR 2.93, 95% CI = 1.17–7.36) and “Organizational surveillance and monitoring” (OR 3.18, 95% CI = 1.29–7.86) showed a significant association with depressive symptoms. For workplace violence, the “Experience of psychological and sexual violence from supervisors and coworkers” (OR 4.07, 95% CI = 1.58–10.50) showed a significant association. When the number of high-risk emotional labor-related factors was 1 or more, 13.1% showed depressive symptoms. When the number of high-risk workplace violence-related factors was 1 or more, 14.4% had statistically significant depressive symptoms.ConclusionsA significant result was found for depressive symptoms related to Emotional disharmony, which is a sub-topic of emotional labor, and those at high risk for “Organizational surveillance and monitoring.” For workplace violence, depressive symptoms were high for the group at high risk for the “experience of psychological and sexual violence from supervisors and coworkers.” In this way, management of emotional disharmony, a sub-factor of emotional labor, is necessary, and improvements to traditional corporate culture that monitors emotional labor is necessary. Violence from colleagues and supervisors in the workplace must also be reduced.IRB Approval No. SCHUH 2017–01-029. Registered 26 January 2017. Retrospectively registered.

Highlights

  • In modern society, the scale of the service industry is continuously expanding, and the number of service workers is increasing

  • This study aims to examine the relationship between workplace violence and depressive symptoms in female bank employees who work in a typical service industry that involves emotional labor

  • This study investigated the relation between emotional labor and depressive symptoms using the Korean Emotional Labor Scale (K-ELS) and KWVS, and Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D)

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Summary

Introduction

The scale of the service industry is continuously expanding, and the number of service workers is increasing. Physical and mental problems related to emotional labor are becoming a major social problem. We investigated the relationship between emotional labor, workplace violence, and depressive symptoms in female bank employees, which is a typical service industry. The risk of service workers being exposed to verbal and physical violence from customers (e.g., being yelled at) is increasing at work, and physical and mental problems experienced by these employees are becoming a significant social problem [2]. Emotional labor refers to expressing only certain emotions with customers, or regulating emotions to meet job requirements [3]. Emotional labor is known to affect burnout [7] and depression [8]

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