“…When dealing with risk factors, such as the demands placed on a professional or a lack of social support, which are neither tangible nor explicitly defined––being, rather, features of the psychosocial work environment––evaluating their adverse consequences in terms of well-being is complicated [25]. Since it was developed, the job demands-control-support (JDCS) model [26,27] has been widely used to explain the relationships between the psychosocial aspects of work and work-related well-being and health [6,25,28,29,30,31]. In 1979, Robert Karasek introduced the job demand-control (JDC) model, which comprises two basic dimensions: psychological job demands and control [25,32].…”