Abstract

Insomnia among workers reduces the quality of life, contributes toward the economic burden of healthcare costs and losses in work performance. The relationship between occupational stress and insomnia has been reported in previous studies, but there has been little attention to temperament in occupational safety and health research. The aim of this study was to clarify the relationships between temperament, occupational stress, and insomnia. The subjects were 133 Japanese daytime local government employees. Temperament was assessed using the Temperament Evaluation of Memphis, Pisa, Paris, and San Diego-Auto questionnaire (TEMPS-A). Occupational stress was assessed using the Generic Job Stress Questionnaire (GJSQ). Insomnia was assessed using the Athens Insomnia Scale (AIS). Stepwise multiple logistic regression analyses were conducted. In a stepwise multivariate logistic regression analysis, it was found that the higher subdivided stress group by “role conflict” (OR = 5.29, 95% CI, 1.61–17.32) and anxious temperament score (OR = 1.33; 95% CI, 1.19–1.49) was associated with the presence of insomnia using an adjusted model, whereas other factors were excluded from the model. The study limitations were the sample size and the fact that only Japanese local government employees were surveyed. This study demonstrated the relationships between workers’ anxious temperament, role conflict, and insomnia. Recognizing one’s own anxious temperament would lead to self-insight, and the recognition of anxious temperament and reduction of role conflict by their supervisors or coworkers would reduce the prevalence of insomnia among workers in the workplace.

Highlights

  • Insomnia impairs daytime functioning [1], reduces the quality of life [2], and contributes toward the economic burden of healthcare costs [3, 4] and losses in work performance [5]

  • The aim of this study was to clarify the relationships between temperaments, occupational stress, and insomnia among local government employees

  • This study identified the relationships between temperaments, occupational stress, and insomnia using the TEMPS-A, Generic Job Stress Questionnaire (GJSQ), and the Athens Insomnia Scale (AIS) among Japanese local government employees

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Summary

Introduction

Insomnia impairs daytime functioning [1], reduces the quality of life [2], and contributes toward the economic burden of healthcare costs [3, 4] and losses in work performance (e.g., absenteeism and presenteeism) [5]. Employees’ temperaments, occupational stress, and insomnia such as depressed mood and anhedonia [7]. Some studies have demonstrated the relationship between insomnia and various types of occupational stress, such as job demand, job control, social support, job insecurity, organizational justice, intragroup conflict, job strain, effort–reward imbalance, employment level, and shift work [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20]

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