A study on the relationship between ergonomic factors and work stress outcomes among employees in Sarawak State Federal Prison / Jeremy Alpanz Webley Janung

Webley Janung, Jeremy Alpanz (2018) A study on the relationship between ergonomic factors and work stress outcomes among employees in Sarawak State Federal Prison / Jeremy Alpanz Webley Janung. [Student Project] (Unpublished)

Abstract

It is very important for the employee to take care of their health and work life in the workplace environment. Ergonomic has shown to be really effective as it helps the employee to be more efficient and reduce the risk of injury while performing their task in the workplace. Stress is the most common problem in the office. It affects the employee and the job performance because the situation in the office can be more unpleasant sometimes. The aim of this study is to discover the relationship between ergonomics factors and the work stress outcomes at Sarawak State Federal Prison at Jalan Puncak Borneo located at Kota Padawan, Sarawak, Malaysia. The respondents from all departments will give their respond on the variables such as health, working chair, humidity, lighting, and working hours as to see how it response and react to stress outcome.

Metadata

Item Type: Student Project
Creators:
Creators
Email / ID Num.
Webley Janung, Jeremy Alpanz
UNSPECIFIED
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HF Commerce > Job stress. Stress management
H Social Sciences > HF Commerce > Personnel management. Employment management
H Social Sciences > HF Commerce > Personnel management. Employment management > Job evaluation
Divisions: Universiti Teknologi MARA, Sarawak > Kota Samarahan Campus > Faculty of Business and Management
Programme: BACHELOR IN OFFICE SYSTEM MANAGEMENT (HONS.)
Keywords: ergonomic factors, work stress, employees
Date: 2018
URI: https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/66636
Edit Item
Edit Item

Download

[thumbnail of 66636.pdf] Text
66636.pdf

Download (541kB)

Digital Copy

Digital (fulltext) is available at:

Physical Copy

Physical status and holdings:
Item Status:
On Shelf

ID Number

66636

Indexing

Statistic

Statistic details