Job Demands and Resources among Healthcare Professionals during Virus Pandemics: A Review and Examination of Fluctuations in Mental Health Strain during COVID-19

被引:62
作者
Britt, Thomas W. [1 ]
Shuffler, Marissa L. [1 ]
Pegram, Riley L. [1 ]
Xoxakos, Phoebe [1 ]
Rosopa, Patrick J. [1 ]
Hirsh, Emily [2 ]
Jackson, William [2 ]
机构
[1] Clemson Univ, Clemson, SC 29631 USA
[2] Univ South Carolina, Sch Med Greenville, Greenville, SC USA
来源
APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL REVIEW-PSYCHOLOGIE APPLIQUEE-REVUE INTERNATIONALE | 2021年 / 70卷 / 01期
关键词
PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT; HOSPITAL EMPLOYEES; COPING STRATEGIES; SARS; WORKERS; PHYSICIANS; BURNOUT; LONG; PREVALENCE; PREDICTOR;
D O I
10.1111/apps.12304
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
The present article examines how job demands and resources are related to indices of strain among healthcare professionals during virus pandemics. The article also presents the results of a study examining the relationships between COVID-19 demands (e.g., lack of personal protective equipment, concerns about infecting family members), resources (meaningful work, social support), and mental health strain within a sample of emergency medicine personnel over six consecutive weeks. COVID-19-related demands and hours worked were hypothesized to be positively related to mental health strain, whereas meaningful work and social support were hypothesized to be negatively related to mental health strain. Hours worked the prior week were hypothesized to exacerbate the positive relationships between COVID-19 demands and mental health strain, whereas the resources of meaningful work and social support were expected to buffer the relationships. Multilevel models controlling for mental health strain the prior week revealed that COVID-19 demands, along with hours worked, were each related to higher mental health strain during the week. Hours worked magnified the within-person relationship between personal COVID-19 demands and mental health strain. In contrast to the hypotheses, social support and meaningful work were not related to mental health strain. Discussion focuses on the implications of the findings for healthcare professionals.
引用
收藏
页码:120 / 149
页数:30
相关论文
共 62 条
[1]   Best-Practice Recommendations for Estimating Cross-Level Interaction Effects Using Multilevel Modeling [J].
Aguinis, Herman ;
Gottfredson, Ryan K. ;
Culpepper, Steven Andrew .
JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, 2013, 39 (06) :1490-1528
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2018, R Package
[3]  
Bakker A. B., 2007, Journal of Managerial Psychology, V22, P309, DOI [10.1108/02683940710733115.62, DOI 10.1108/02683940710733115, 10.1108/02683940710733115]
[4]   Job Demands-Resources Theory: Taking Stock and Looking Forward [J].
Bakker, Arnold B. ;
Demerouti, Evangelia .
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 22 (03) :273-285
[5]   Methods of ecological momentary assessment in organizational research [J].
Beal, DJ ;
Weiss, HM .
ORGANIZATIONAL RESEARCH METHODS, 2003, 6 (04) :440-464
[6]   Preparedness and the importance of meeting the needs of healthcare workers: a qualitative study on Ebola [J].
Belfroid, E. ;
van Steenbergen, J. ;
Timen, A. ;
Ellerbroek, P. ;
Huis, A. ;
Hulscher, M. .
JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL INFECTION, 2018, 98 (02) :212-218
[7]   Sense of meaning as a predictor of burnout in emergency physicians in Israel: a national survey [J].
Ben-Itzhak, Shulamit ;
Dvash, Jonathan ;
Maor, Maya ;
Rosenberg, Noa ;
Halpern, Pinchas .
CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2015, 2 (04) :217-225
[8]   Estimation of an inter-rater intra-class correlation coefficient that overcomes common assumption violations in the assessment of health measurement scales [J].
Bobak, Carly A. ;
Barr, Paul J. ;
O'Malley, A. James .
BMC MEDICAL RESEARCH METHODOLOGY, 2018, 18
[9]  
Britt T W, 2001, J Occup Health Psychol, V6, P53, DOI 10.1037/1076-8998.6.1.53
[10]   A Systematic, Thematic Review of Social and Occupational Factors Associated With Psychological Outcomes in Healthcare Employees During an Infectious Disease Outbreak [J].
Brooks, Samantha Kelly ;
Dunn, Rebecca ;
Amlot, Richard ;
Rubin, Gideon James ;
Greenberg, Neil .
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2018, 60 (03) :248-257