AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to explore how sense of coherence, work engagement, and work environment influenced psychological distress during the early COVID-19 pandemic in Chile.
  • - Data was collected from April to December 2020 using various scales to assess work engagement, sense of coherence, and psychological distress, and the results showed that 72.7% of participants experienced high psychological distress, particularly women.
  • - Key factors linked to psychological distress included work-related stress, low sense of coherence, low work engagement, and poor health perceptions, which can inform strategies to mitigate psychological impacts in future pandemics.

Article Abstract

Objectives: The aim of this study was to analyse the relationship between sense of coherence, work engagement, and work environment variables as predictors of the level of psychological distress during the first phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in Chile.

Methods: Cross-sectional descriptive study collected between April 22 and December 16, 2020, using non-probabilistic snowball sampling. The study variables and instruments were socio-demographic variables, work engagement (UWES-9 scale), sense of coherence (Antonovsky SOC-13 scale), and psychological distress (GHQ-12 scale). Multivariate analysis and binary logistic regression were performed including the scores of the three questionnaires and other variables such as effectiveness, safety, stress, health perception, and sex. Finally, the CHAID technique was applied to create a segmentation tree.

Results: 72.7 % of participants had high levels of psychological distress, more predominantly among women, with work stress and low sense of coherence acting as the most influential mediators in generating psychological distress, and even more so when both were combined. Low work engagement and the availability of safe and effective means to prevent infection were predictors of psychological distress among workers.

Conclusion: During the first phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, factors that contributed to psychological distress in the Chilean population were identified. These included a fair or poor perception of health, being a woman, work-related stress, availability of safety measures, low level of work engagement, and low level of sense of coherence. Identifying these factors may help prevent similar effects in future phases of the current pandemic or in future pandemics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11128991PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e31327DOI Listing

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