Relationship Between Changes in Workplace Bullying Status and the Reporting of Personality Characteristics

J Occup Environ Med. 2016 Sep;58(9):902-10. doi: 10.1097/JOM.0000000000000822.

Abstract

Objective: To examine whether a shift in work-related bullying status, from being non-bullied to being bullied or vice versa, was associated with changes in reporting of personality characteristics.

Methods: Data on bullying and personality (neuroticism, extraversion, and sense of coherence) were collected in three waves approximately 2 years apart (N = 4947). Using a within-subjects design, personality change scores that followed altered bullying status were evaluated with one-sample t tests. Sensitivity analyses targeted depressive symptoms.

Results: Shifts from non-bullied to frequently bullied were associated with increased neuroticism or decreased sense of coherence manageability scores. Shifts from bullied to non-bullied were associated with decreasing neuroticism and increasing extraversion scores, or increasing sense of coherence meaningfulness and comprehensibility scores. Excluding depressive cases had minor effects.

Conclusions: Bullying seems to some extent to affect personality scale scores, which thus seem sensitive to environmental and social circumstances.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Bullying*
  • Depression / epidemiology
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Personality*
  • Workplace / psychology*