SOME OF THE PSYCHOLOGICAL AND HEALTH VARIABLES IN A SAMPLE OF WORKERS IN THE PROFESSION OF COLLECTING, CLASSIFYING AND RECYCLING MEDICAL WASTE | ||||
Journal of Environmental Science | ||||
Article 2, Volume 50, Issue 5, May 2021, Page 49-85 PDF (673.09 K) | ||||
Document Type: Review Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/jes.2021.182291 | ||||
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Authors | ||||
Damiana G. F. Mikhael1; Mohammad R. Al-Beheiri2; Ahmad I. Schuman3 | ||||
1Environmental pollution Protection Association | ||||
2Faculty of higher Studies for Childhood Ain Shams University | ||||
3Faculty of Medicine, Ain Shams University | ||||
Abstract | ||||
The current study aims to reveal the relationship between future concern Self-control in people with HIV and those with no staff In the profession of collecting, classifying and recycling medical waste as you seek To expose the differences between future anxiety and self-control Depending on the degree of injury To achieve these objectives, the comparative, related descriptive approach was used where Use statistical methods —Test "T" —the Pearson correlation coefficient * based on sample (n= 100) Medical waste and recycling workers from a facility Nasser Cairo Using the measure of future concern from the researchers The yardstick of self-control by the researcher The economic, social, and cultural scale, and the Reven IQ test The results of the study have resulted in a negative correlation between future anxiety and self-control, indicating that the more anxiety the future becomes, the less self-insufficiency of medical waste workers and their recycling The differences between future anxiety and the degree of injury are particularly particular The results have resulted in statistically significant differences in The degree of injury to the injured The differences between self-control and degree of injury have been lost The results have resulted in statistically significant differences in degree Injury to the benefit of the uninjured | ||||
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