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Bullying in Danish work-life: Prevalence and health correlates

542

Citations

29

References

2001

Year

TLDR

Despite Scandinavia’s pioneering work on workplace bullying, Danish research has largely neglected the issue, leaving the prevalence and sectoral variation of bullying in Denmark largely unknown and difficult to compare internationally. The study aimed to estimate bullying prevalence in Denmark, examine its association with psychological and psychosomatic stress, compare prevalence across sectors, test the hypothesis of low Scandinavian bullying levels, and evaluate how different criteria affect prevalence estimates. Results revealed that 2–4% of respondents reported occasional bullying, while stricter operational definitions raised prevalence to 8–25% and exposure was linked to increased self‑reported strain reactions.

Abstract

Given the pioneering role of Scandinavian research in the field of bullying at work, it is surprising that Danish researchers have largely ignored this problem. Presumably, this has led to a situation where many Danish company managers and unions ignore the high individual and organizational costs of workplace bullying. An additional effect of this lack of research is that it has been difficult to estimate the extent to which the prevalence of bullying varies in different sectors of Danish work-life. Furthermore, the scarcity of research has impeded us from determining whether a low prevalence of bullying is a general characteristic of Scandinavian work-life as indicated by previous Swedish and Norwegian studies. Yet again, making such between-nations comparisons in the prevalence of workplace bullying is difficult given the tendency amongst researchers to employ different ways of measuring bullying. The aims of the present study were: (1) to assess the prevalence of bullying in Danish work-life; (2) to investigate if exposure to bullying behaviours at work is related to self-reported psychological and psychosomatic stress symptoms; (3) to examine potential differences in the prevalence of bullying in various work sectors; (4) to explore the hypothesis that, generally, Scandinavian work-life is characterized by low levels of bullying; and (5) to investigate the extent to which using different criteria for assessing bullying results in disparate prevalence estimates. Results showed that 2-4% of the respondents reported being victims of bullying, in most cases only occasionally. Compared to self-reported bullying, prevalence levels based on an operational definition of bullying (i.e., weekly exposure to one act for at least 6 months) were higher in all the samples, between 8% and 25%. When using a more strict criterion of two acts a week, these figures were significantly reduced. Exposure to bullying was found to be associated with increased self-reported strain reactions.

References

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