Stress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distress

Background: Internationally, high levels of stress and Psychological Distress have been identified in university employees. There have been calls to investigate stress over time and to include measures of coping and personality. This study provides the first longitudinal assessment of stress and Psy...

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Main Author: Connolly, John Francis
Published: Queen Margaret University 2013
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Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.632536
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6325362019-01-04T03:20:23ZStress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distressConnolly, John Francis2013Background: Internationally, high levels of stress and Psychological Distress have been identified in university employees. There have been calls to investigate stress over time and to include measures of coping and personality. This study provides the first longitudinal assessment of stress and Psychological Distress and examines the role of personality and coping in university employees during campus relocation Method: All 500 employees in Queen Margaret University were invited to complete standardised measures assessing Psychological Distress and sources of stress (HSE Indicator Tool) before (N = 143) and after relocation (N = 116). Participants also completed measures assessing Job Satisfaction, Personality, Coping and additional demographic information. Findings: High levels of Psychological Distress were identified before relocation (42%) and at 6 months (38%). Academic staff had a higher prevalence of Distress following relocation. Matched pair analyses (N = 48) showed the majority of stress sources remained stable from T1 to T2 with one significant decrease in reported levels of Control. Stressors explained 31.8% of the variance in Psychological Distress even when the effects of pre-specified variables (Neuroticism, Coping and age) were controlled. Employees with higher levels of Neuroticism and Emotion focused coping had significantly higher levels of Psychological Distress. Discussion and conclusions: Psychological Distress was higher than in population norms and other occupational groups. The primary stressors were identified and targets (based on national benchmarks) suggested. On-going monitoring and actions aimed at reducing stress and improving Psychological Distress are warranted. This is one of the first studies to assess the relationship between the management standards (indicated by the HSE Indicator tool) and stress outcome, and to use a matched participant design to assess change in the management standards. That the Management standards predict Psychological Distress lends support to the use of the management standards approach.616.8Psychology and SociologyQueen Margaret Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.632536https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/7720Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 616.8
Psychology and Sociology
spellingShingle 616.8
Psychology and Sociology
Connolly, John Francis
Stress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distress
description Background: Internationally, high levels of stress and Psychological Distress have been identified in university employees. There have been calls to investigate stress over time and to include measures of coping and personality. This study provides the first longitudinal assessment of stress and Psychological Distress and examines the role of personality and coping in university employees during campus relocation Method: All 500 employees in Queen Margaret University were invited to complete standardised measures assessing Psychological Distress and sources of stress (HSE Indicator Tool) before (N = 143) and after relocation (N = 116). Participants also completed measures assessing Job Satisfaction, Personality, Coping and additional demographic information. Findings: High levels of Psychological Distress were identified before relocation (42%) and at 6 months (38%). Academic staff had a higher prevalence of Distress following relocation. Matched pair analyses (N = 48) showed the majority of stress sources remained stable from T1 to T2 with one significant decrease in reported levels of Control. Stressors explained 31.8% of the variance in Psychological Distress even when the effects of pre-specified variables (Neuroticism, Coping and age) were controlled. Employees with higher levels of Neuroticism and Emotion focused coping had significantly higher levels of Psychological Distress. Discussion and conclusions: Psychological Distress was higher than in population norms and other occupational groups. The primary stressors were identified and targets (based on national benchmarks) suggested. On-going monitoring and actions aimed at reducing stress and improving Psychological Distress are warranted. This is one of the first studies to assess the relationship between the management standards (indicated by the HSE Indicator tool) and stress outcome, and to use a matched participant design to assess change in the management standards. That the Management standards predict Psychological Distress lends support to the use of the management standards approach.
author Connolly, John Francis
author_facet Connolly, John Francis
author_sort Connolly, John Francis
title Stress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distress
title_short Stress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distress
title_full Stress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distress
title_fullStr Stress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distress
title_full_unstemmed Stress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distress
title_sort stress and coping in university employees : a longitudinal evaluation of stress, personality, coping and psychological distress
publisher Queen Margaret University
publishDate 2013
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.632536
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