ORIGINAL PAPER
Dimensions of work ethic as predictors of strategies to cope with stress
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1
SWPS Uniwersytet Humanistycznospołeczny / SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Warszawa, Poland
(Wydział Zamiejscowy w Katowicach / Katowice Faculty of Psychology)
2
Uniwersytet Śląski w Katowicach / University of Silesia in Katowice, Katowice, Poland
(Wydział Pedagogiki i Psychologii, Instytut Psychologii, Zakład Psychologii Pracy i Organizacji / Faculty of Pedagogy and Psychology,
Institute of Psychology, Work and Organizational Psychology Department)
3
SWPS Uniwersytet Humanistycznospołeczny / SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Warszawa, Poland
(Wydział Zamiejscowy w Poznaniu, Zakład Psychologii Pracy i Organizacji / Faculty in Poznan,
Work and Organizational Psychology Department)
Online publication date: 2017-08-25
Corresponding author
Anita Pollak
Uniwersytet Śląski w Katowicach,
Wydział Pedagogiki i Psychologii, Instytut Psychologii, Zakład Psychologii Pracy i Organizacji,
ul. Grażyńskiego 53, 40-126 Katowice
Med Pr Work Health Saf. 2017;68(6):711-24
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ABSTRACT
Background: The article presents the mutual relations between the components of work ethic and the strategies of coping with
stress used by employees of different branches. Material and Methods: Work ethic was presented as a syndrome of the following
attitudes: perceiving work as a moral value, treating work as a central value in life, and the belief in the importance of hard
work that leads to success. This ethic also consists of the following components: unwillingness to waste time, disapproval of spare
time (anti-leisure), willingness to delay gratification, willingness to act honestly at work (morality/ethic), and being independent
(self-reliance). Coping strategies were presented as 3 dimensions (obtained by application of factor analysis of the questionnaire
scales COPE (Coping Orientations to Problems Experienced)): proactive cognitive operations, avoidance of action and seeking
support. Results: The study conducted on 360 employees of different branches shows that the dimensions of the work ethic are
moderately related to strategies emphasizing proactive cognitive operations and poorly related to seeking support and avoidance
of action. At the same time, the relations between work ethic and avoidance of action are negative (higher work ethic is linked
with lower tendency to avoid action). Conclusions: Predictors of proactive cognitive operations are unwillingness to waste time,
treating work as a central value in life, willingness to act honestly at work (morality/ethic) and being independent (self-reliance).
Med Pr 2017;68(6):711–724