perceived strain
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henriikka Juntunen ◽  
Heta Tuominen ◽  
Jaana Viljaranta ◽  
Riikka Hirvonen ◽  
Auli Toom ◽  
...  

We investigated university students’ remote teaching experiences, how they predict psychological well-being, and whether the predictions vary depending on students’ motivation. Self-reports were collected from Finnish university students (N = 2686). Within the latent variable modeling framework, we classified students according to their expectancy-value-cost profiles, compared latent means, and tested whether the predictions differed across groups. Six groups described the data best: moderately motivated, utility-oriented, disengaged, indifferent, positively ambitious, and struggling ambitious. The groups differed significantly on remote teaching experiences and well-being, but predictions were similar across the groups: Engagement was predicted positively by evaluation of remote teaching and negatively by perceived strain, exhaustion positively by evaluation of teaching and perceived strain, and depressive symptoms by perceived strain and sense of alienation. Findings suggest that remote teaching experiences during the pandemic contribute to students’ psychological well-being in distinct ways, and that certain motivational mindsets might buffer against the negative effects.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa Wegmann ◽  
Annika Brandtner ◽  
Matthias Brand

The occurrence of the COVID-19-virus led to drastic short-term measures to reduce its spread and influence. Regulations such as “physical distancing,” mentioned as “social distancing,” and the closure of public facilities during the lockdown could be perceived as burdensome especially by individuals who feel a strong need for social exchange and belonging. These components such as need to belong and the fear of missing out also play a major role in the development and maintenance of a problematic use of social networks. Researchers have argued recently that an increase of addictive (online) behaviors may be a likely consequence of subjectively experienced restrictions in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. The current study investigates the interplay of perceived strain due to COVID-19-related restrictions and the fear of missing out (FoMO) as well as of symptoms of problematic social-networks use. We hypothesized that perceived strain due to COVID-19-related restrictions mediates the effect of specific predisposing variables related to social needs on the symptom severity of a problematic use. To assess the perceived strain due to COVID-19-related restrictions, we developed a specific questionnaire asking for perceived COVID-19-related strain in several domains of everyday-life. An exploratory factor analysis identified five factors: perceived strain related to restrictions of (1) social contacts, (2) travel, (3) childcare, (4) work, and (5) own health. In a sample of 719 German participants and data collection during the first COVID-19 lockdown (March 30th until April 3rd 2020), a structural equation model was calculated showing that higher levels of need to belong and FoMO increase perceived COVID-19-related strain, which is related to symptoms of a problematic social-networks use. The effect of need to belong on problematic social-networks use is mediated by experienced COVID-19-related strain and FoMO-online. Even if the use of social networks is not pathological per se, it may be associated with suffering for a vulnerable part of users. We conclude that specific needs and fear-associated predisposing variables contribute to experiencing physical distance and other pandemic-related restrictions as more stressful, which may increase problematic social-networks use and potentially other addictive behaviors as well in the context of the COVID-19-related lockdown.


Author(s):  
Desiree Braun ◽  
Lorenz Theiler ◽  
Elmar Brähler ◽  
Katja Petrowski

AbstractDue to their work activities, emergency physicians are regularly exposed to exceptional mental and physical situations. In order to prevent stress-related illnesses, the triggers of hormonal and subjectively perceived stress must be understood better. On a sample of emergency physicians from two air rescue services (N = 80), the cortisol awakening response (CAR) was determined on flight rescue days, clinic days, and days off. Pearson correlations showed significant connections between the CAR on flight rescue days and individual scales of the Trier Inventory for Chronic Stress (TICS) and the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS). The results indicate that a lower subjective stress level is associated with higher levels of hormonal stress. Stepwise regression analyses showed a significant influence of the number of professional years, subjectively perceived stress, pressure to succeed, and social isolation. The results suggest that the hormonal stress burden of emergency physicians is in a complex relationship with perceived strain.


2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (12) ◽  
pp. 3897-3908
Author(s):  
Yeonggwang Park ◽  
Manuel Díaz Cádiz ◽  
Kathleen F. Nagle ◽  
Cara E. Stepp

Purpose Assessment of strained voice quality is difficult due to the weak reliability of auditory-perceptual evaluation and lack of strong acoustic correlates. This study evaluated the contributions of relative fundamental frequency (RFF) and mid-to-high frequency noise to the perception of strain. Method Stimuli were created using recordings of speakers producing /ifi/ with a comfortable voice and with maximum vocal effort. RFF values of the comfortable voice samples were synthetically lowered, and RFF values of the maximum vocal effort samples were synthetically raised. Mid-to-high frequency noise was added to the samples. Twenty listeners rated strain in a visual sort-and-rate task. The effects of RFF modification and added noise on strain were assessed using an analysis of variance; intra- and interrater reliability were compared with and without noise. Results Lowering RFF in the comfortable voice samples increased their perceived strain, whereas raising RFF in the maximum vocal effort samples decreased their strain. Adding noise increased strain and decreased intra- and interrater reliability relative to samples without added noise. Conclusions Both RFF and mid-to-high frequency noise contribute to the perception of strain. The presence of dysphonia may decrease the reliability of auditory-perceptual evaluation of strain, which supports the need for complementary objective assessments. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.13172252


2020 ◽  
Vol 107 ◽  
pp. 103790 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sapna Dhiman ◽  
Pradeep Kumar Sahu ◽  
William R. Reed ◽  
G. Shankar Ganesh ◽  
Ramesh K. Goyal ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Annika Vogt ◽  
Stephanie Stiel ◽  
Maria Heckel ◽  
Swantje Goebel ◽  
Sandra Stephanie Mai ◽  
...  

Abstract Background International studies indicate deficits in end-of-life care that can lead to distress for patients and their next-of-kin. The aim of the study was to translate and validate the “Care of the Dying Evaluation” (CODE) into German (CODE-GER). Methods Translation according to EORTC (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer) guidelines was followed by data collection to evaluate psychometric properties of CODE-GER. Participants were next-of-kin of patients who had died an expected death in two hospitals. They were invited to participate at least eight, but not later than 16 weeks after the patient’s death. To calculate construct validity, the Palliative care Outcome Scale (POS) was assessed. Difficulty and perceived strain of answering the questionnaire were assessed by a numeric scale (0–10). Results Out of 1137 next-of-kin eligible, 317 completed the questionnaire (response rate: 27.9%). Data from 237 main sample participants, 38 interraters and 55 next-of-kin who participated for repeated measurement were analysed. Overall internal consistency, α = 0.86, interrater reliability, ICC (1) = 0.79, and retest-reliability, ICC (1, 2) = 0.85, were good. Convergent validity between POS and CODE-GER, r = −.46, was satisfactory. A principal component analysis with varimax rotation showed a 7-factor solution. Difficulty, M = 2.2; SD ± 2.4, and perceived strain, M = 4.1; SD ± 3.0, of completing the questionnaire were rather low. Conclusion The results from the present study confirm CODE-GER as a reliable and valid instrument to assess the quality of care of the dying person. More over our study adds value to the original questionnaire by proposing a deepened analysis of obtained data. The development of seven subscales increases its potential for further surveys and research. Trial registration This study was registered retrospectively on the 25th of January 2018 at the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00013916).


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S326-S326
Author(s):  
Gul Seckin ◽  
Valarie Bell ◽  
Susan Hughes

Abstract There is a mixed support regarding the effect of Internet use on health and well-being. We estimated the extent to which e-health literacy predicted two domains of negative assessment of well-being: negative affect and self-reported experience of health problems. Respondents were randomly sampled from the largest national online probability-based research panel (N = 710). Hierarchical ordinary least squares regression analyses were employed for hypothesis testing. We computed interaction terms (e-health literacy x strain; e-health literacy x education; and education x strain) as determinants of negative subjective assessment of well-being. Older adults with higher levels of e-health literacy reported significantly more health information consumerism [(t (194) = 7.32, p ≤ .0001] but less strain in medical encounters [(t (194) = 2.92, p ≤ .004]. They reported less negative affect [(t (194) = 2.11, p ≤ .036] and more satisfaction with medical encounters [(t (194) = 4.70, p ≤ .0001]. The effect of perceived strain in medical encounters on negative affect was weaker among those with higher levels of education (β = -.314, p ≤ .01). Education had a significant moderating effect on the association between perceived strain in medical encounters and self-reported health problems, (β = -.550, p ≤ .05). Those who reported lower averages for e-health literacy but higher educational levels indicated lower averages on negative affect (β = -.597, p ≤ .05). Given that conventional methods of acquiring health-related information shift to the Internet, our study holds significant health and social implications for a rapidly growing Internet-connected older population.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. 1058-1065 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Reeve ◽  
Ralph Gordon ◽  
Paul B. Laursen ◽  
Jason K.W. Lee ◽  
Christopher J. Tyler

Purpose: To investigate the effects of short-term, high-intensity interval-training (HIIT) heat acclimation (HA). Methods: Male cyclists/triathletes were assigned into either an HA (n = 13) or a comparison (COMP, n = 10) group. HA completed 3 cycling heat stress tests (HSTs) to exhaustion (60% Wmax; HST1, pre-HA; HST2, post-HA; HST3, 7 d post-HA). HA consisted of 30-min bouts of HIIT cycling (6 min at 50% Wmax, then 12 × 1-min 100%-Wmax bouts with 1-min rests between bouts) on 5 consecutive days. COMP completed HST1 and HST2 only. HST and HA trials were conducted in 35°C/50% relative humidity. Cycling capacity and physiological and perceptual data were recorded. Results: Cycling capacity was impaired after HIIT HA (77.2 [34.2] min vs 56.2 [24.4] min, P = .03) and did not return to baseline after 7 d of no HA (59.2 [37.4] min). Capacity in HST1 and HST2 was similar in COMP (43.5 [8.3] min vs 46.8 [15.7] min, P = .54). HIIT HA lowered resting rectal (37.0°C [0.3°C] vs 36.8°C [0.2°C], P = .05) and body temperature (36.0°C [0.3°C] vs 35.8°C [0.3°C], P = .03) in HST2 compared with HST1 and lowered mean skin temperature (35.4°C [0.5°C] vs 35.1°C [0.3°C], P = .02) and perceived strain on day 5 compared with day 1 of HA. All other data were unaffected. Conclusions: Cycling capacity was impaired in the heat after 5 d of consecutive HIIT HA despite some heat adaptation. Based on data, this approach is not recommended for athletes preparing to compete in the heat; however, it is possible that it may be beneficial if a state of overreaching is avoided.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Fürstenberg ◽  
Sarah Prediger ◽  
Martina Kadmon ◽  
Pascal O. Berberat ◽  
Sigrid Harendza

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