AlbrightA. (1992). Attitudes toward working mothers: Accommodating the needs of mothers in the work force. AAOHN Journal, 40(10), 490–495.
2.
AndersonE.A., & LeighA.L. (1991). Coping with employment and family stress: Employment arrangement and gender differences. Sex Roles, 24(3/4), 223–237.
3.
BaruchG.K.BienerL., & BarnettR.C. (1987). Women and gender in research on work and family stress. American Psychologist, 42(2), 130–134.
4.
ChanT., & WardS. (1993). Coping process theory: A tool to reduce stress and cardiovascular disease. AAOHN Journal, 47(10), 499–503.
5.
CohenS.KamarackT., & MermelsteinR. (1983). A global measure of perceived stress. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 24, 385–396.
6.
CrawfordS.L. (1993). Job stress and occupational health nursing: Modeling health affirming choices. AAOHN Journal, 41(11), 522–528.
7.
DenizenN.K. (1989). The Research Act. (3rd ed.) New York, NY: McGraw Hill.
8.
DuffyM.E. (1987). Methodological triangulation: A vehicle for merging quantitative and qualitative research methods. Image: Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 19(3), 130–133.
9.
EckenrodeJ., & GoreS. (1990). Stress Between Work and Family. New York, NY: Plenum Press.
10.
FrankenhaeuserM.LundbergU., & ChesneyM. (Eds.). (1991). Women, work, and health: Stress opportunities. New York, NY: Plenum Press.
11.
FreedmanS.M., & BisesiM. (1988). Women and workplace stress. Health Values, 12(1), 30–35.
12.
HansenneM. (1993). Stress at work. World Labor Report. Geneva, Switzerland: International Labor Office.
13.
HarlowK.JohnsonR., & CallenP. (1993). Comparison of physical health benefits utilization: Mental and physical health claimants, 1989–1990. Journal of Occupational Medicine, 35(3), 275–281.
14.
Healthy People 2000: National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives. (1991). U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. DHHS Publication No. (PHS) 91-50213.
15.
HendrixW.H. (1989). Job and personal factors related to job stress and risk of developing coronary artery disease. Psychological Reports, 65, 1136–1138.
16.
JohnstonW.B., & PackerA.H. (1987). Workforce 2000: Work and workers for the 21st century. Indianapolis, IN: Hudson Institute.
17.
KarasekR., & TheorellT. (1990). Health work: Stress, productivity, and the reconstruction of working life. New York, NY: Basic Books, Inc.
18.
KnaflK.A.PettengillM.M.BevisM.E., & KirchoffK.T. (1988). Blending qualitative and quantitative approaches to instrument development and data collection. Journal of Professional Nursing, 4, 30–37.
19.
La RossaJ.H. (1988). Women, work, and health: Employment as a risk factor for coronary heart disease. American Journal of Obstetrical Gynecology, 158(6), 1597–1602.
MansonJ.O., & KirschsteinR.L. (1991). PHS Action Plan for Women's Health. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, U.S. Public Health Service, Office on Women's Health. DHHS Publication No. (PHS) 91-50214.
22.
MartinK.J. (1992). Stress related workers' compensation claims: Recommendations involving records release. AAOHN Journal, 40(8), 370–375.
23.
MilesM., & HubermanA. (1994). Qualitative Data Analysis: An Expanded Sourcebook. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.
24.
MisnerS.T.LevinP.F., & HewittJ.B. (1993). Occupational issues in women's health. In: McElmurryB.J., & ParkerR.S. (Eds.). Annual Review of Women's Health. New York, NY: National League for Nursing Press.
25.
MuiA.C. (1992). Caregiver strain among black and white daughter caregivers: A role theory perspective. Gerontologist, 32, 203–212.
26.
MyersS.T., & HaaseJ.E. (1989). Guidelines for integration of quantitative and qualitative approaches. Nursing Research, 38(5), 299–301.
27.
PassannanteM., & NathansonC. (1987). Women in the labor force: Are sex mortality differentials changing?Journal of Occupational Medicine, 29(1), 21–28.
28.
SandelowskiM.DavisD.H., & HarrisB.G. (1989). Artful design: Writing the proposal for research in the naturalist paradigm. Research in Nursing & Health, 12, 77–84.
29.
ScrimshawS.CarballoM.RamosL., & BlairB. (1991). The AIDS rapid anthropological assessment procedures: A tool for health education, planning, and evaluation. Health Education Quarterly, 18(1), 111–123.
30.
SeidelJ. V.KjoisethR., & SeymourE. (1988). The ethnograph: A program for the computer assisted analysis of text based data. Corvallis, OR: Qualis Research Associates.
31.
SnappM.B. (1992). Occupational stress, social support, and depression among black and white professional-managerial women. Women Health, 18, 41–79.
32.
SteffyB.D. & JonesJ.W. (1988). Workplace stress indicators of coronary disease risk. Academy of Management Journal, 31(3), 686–697.
33.
TaylorJ.R., & DeesJ.P. (1993). How to design a mental health system to optimize mental health. AAOHN Journal, 41(1), 330–336.
34.
U.S. Department of Commerce. (1990). Bureau of the Census. 1990
35.
Census of Population and Housing Summary Tape File. Washington, DC: Department of Commerce.
36.
U.S. Department of Labor. (1992). Bureau of Labor Statistics. Washington, DC: Department of Labor.
37.
Walcott-McQuiggJ.A. (1994). Exploring weight management health practices of Hispanic women. Washington, DC: American Nurses Foundation.
38.
WarshawL.J. (1988). Occupational stress: Psychiatric injury in the workplace. In: LarsenR.C., & FeltonJ.S. (Eds.). Occupational Medicine: State of the Art Reviews, vol. 3, no. 4. Philadelphia, PA: Hanley & Belfus.
39.
WoodyB. (1992). Black Women in the Workplace: Impacts of Structural Change in the Economy. New York, NY: Greenwood Press.
40.
YzaguirreR. (1992). State of Hispanic America 1991: An overview. Washington, DC: National Council of La Raza.
41.
ZambranaR.E. (1982). Work, Family and Health: Latina Women in Transition. Bronx, NY: Hispanic Research Center.