Occupational Stress Index
The Occupational Stress Index (OSI) is a comprehensive self-report measure of job-related stress and coping resources. Developed by Osipow and Spokane in 1987, the 140-item scale (abbreviated versions also exist) captures role overload, role boundary, role insufficiency, role ambiguity, physical environment demands, and coping resources. The OSI is grounded in stress and coping theory and predicts health outcomes, performance, and retention.
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- Osipow, S. H., & Spokane, A. R. (1987). Occupational Stress Inventory manual (Rev. ed.). Psychological Assessment Resources. · ISBN 978-0911216929
- Spokane, A. R., Ohlund, B., Luchetta, E., & Meir, E. I. (1997). Validity of the Occupational Stress Inventory: Comparative and factorial validity with measures of job characteristics. Journal of Career Assessment, 5(3), 343–355. · URL
- Pearlman, D. S., Hartman, E. A., & O'Neill, C. B. (2000). Occupational stress: A review and critique of three major approaches. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 21(8), 915–933. · URL
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