Department of Educational Psychology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, 77843-4225, USA.
Department of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
BMC Psychiatry. 2021 Oct 6;21(1):489. doi: 10.1186/s12888-021-03506-6.
The COVID-19 pandemic has a detrimental effect on the health and well-being of health care workers (HCWs). The extent to which HCWs may differ in their experience of depression and anxiety is unclear, and longitudinal studies are lacking. The present study examined theorized differences in distress between resilient and non-resilient HCWs over time, as reported in a national online survey. We also examined possible differences in distress as a function of sex and doctoral-level status.
A national sample responded to an online survey data that included the study measures. Of the HCWs who responded, 666 had useable data at the two time points. A longitudinal structural equation model tested an a priori model that specified the relationship of a resilient personality prototype to self-reported resilience, coping, depression and anxiety at both measurement occasions. Additional invariance models examined possible differences by sex and doctoral-level status.
The final model explained 46.4% of the variance in psychological distress at Time 1 and 69.1% at Time 2. A non-resilient personality prototype predicted greater depression and anxiety. A resilient personality prototype was predictive of and operated through self-reported resilience and less disengaged coping to effect lower distress. No effects were found for active coping, however. The final model was generally invariant by sex and HCWs status. Additional analyses revealed that non-doctoral level HCWs had significantly higher depression and anxiety than doctoral-level HCWs on both occasions.
HCWs differ in their susceptibility to distress imposed by COVID-19. Those who are particularly vulnerable may have characteristics that contribute to a lower sense of confidence and efficacy in stressful situations, and more likely to rely on ineffective, disengaged coping behaviors that can exacerbate stress levels. Individual interventions and institutional policies may be implemented to support HCWs at risk.
COVID-19 大流行对医护人员(HCWs)的健康和福祉产生了不利影响。HCWs 在抑郁和焦虑方面的体验可能存在差异,这一点尚不清楚,而且缺乏纵向研究。本研究通过一项全国性在线调查,考察了韧性和非韧性 HCWs 在一段时间内的困扰程度存在差异的理论假设。我们还研究了作为功能的性别和博士水平状态差异可能导致的困扰。
一个全国性样本对一项在线调查数据做出了回应,其中包括研究措施。在回答的 HCWs 中,有 666 人在两个时间点都有可用数据。纵向结构方程模型测试了一个预先设定的模型,该模型规定了有韧性人格原型与自我报告的韧性、应对、抑郁和焦虑之间的关系,这两个测量时间点都包括在内。其他不变性模型检查了性别和博士水平状态的可能差异。
最终模型解释了心理困扰在时间 1 的 46.4%和时间 2 的 69.1%的方差。非韧性人格原型预测了更大的抑郁和焦虑。有韧性人格原型预测并通过自我报告的韧性和较少的不参与应对来影响较低的困扰。然而,没有发现主动应对的效果。最终模型在性别和 HCWs 地位方面通常是不变的。额外的分析表明,在两个场合,非博士水平的 HCWs 的抑郁和焦虑都显著高于博士水平的 HCWs。
HCWs 在 COVID-19 带来的困扰的易感性方面存在差异。那些特别脆弱的人可能具有一些特征,这些特征导致他们在压力情况下缺乏信心和效能感,更有可能依赖无效的、不参与的应对行为,这些行为会加剧压力水平。可以实施个体干预和机构政策,以支持处于风险中的 HCWs。