My SciELO
Services on Demand
Journal
Article
Indicators
- Cited by SciELO
- Access statistics
Related links
- Cited by Google
- Similars in SciELO
- Similars in Google
Share
Medicina y Seguridad del Trabajo
On-line version ISSN 1989-7790Print version ISSN 0465-546X
Abstract
HARASEMIUC, Víctor Adrián and DIAZ BERNAL, Jesús Raúl. Evidence based relationship between mobbing and depression. Med. segur. trab. [online]. 2013, vol.59, n.232, pp.361-371. ISSN 1989-7790. https://dx.doi.org/10.4321/S0465-546X2013000300006.
Introduction: Workplace bullying is a silent epidemic that affects motivation and productivity of workers, but there are also consequences in psychosocial level being depression one of its. Objectives: The objective is to identify the scientific evidence on the relationship between bullying and depression. Methods: We formulated a set of equations search using the terms: Mobbing, Depression, Workplace Bullying, Harassment, Workplace Bullying Depression, which were applied to different bibliographic databases (IBECS, LILACS, The Cochrane Library Plus, SciELO, WHOLIS , OSH Update), which allowed the identification of 36 references of which 8 met the inclusion criteria. In relation with each objectives the information was extracted after full-text review. Results: The prevalence of bullying ranged between 11.9% and 81% depending on the country in which the study was conducted. Female, having a college education and seniority or experience in the job are factors that determined an increased vulnerability to harassment. The profile of the harasser is: male, and generally superior to the victim, verbal abuse, harassment and increased workload are the bullying strategies most used. All studies evidence a positive relationship between bullying and depression. Conclusions: The review, does not establish a causal relationship between bullying and depression. The reproducibility of the results of the studies show the existence of an association between bullying and depression, being necessary to promote longitudinal studies that could show, or not, a causal association.
Keywords : Workplace Bullying; depression; psychosocial risk.