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COVID-19 大流行后期医护人员应对流行病相关的工作压力:反射功能和认知情绪调节的影响
Authors Zhou T, Wang Q, Wang Y, Cheng L
Received 12 July 2023
Accepted for publication 10 October 2023
Published 26 October 2023 Volume 2023:16 Pages 4377—4388
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PRBM.S429109
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Igor Elman
Background: Healthcare workers encountered novel job stressors during the late stage of the COVID-19 pandemic. These stressors possessed potential deleterious effects on mental health outcomes, yet the underlying mediating and moderating mechanisms remained relatively unexplored.
Objective: The current study aimed to examine the role of cognitive emotion regulation as a mediator in the association between pandemic-related job stressors and the psychological symptoms of healthcare professionals in the late stage of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the role of reflective functioning as a resilience factor moderating both the associations of pandemic-related job stressors and cognitive emotion regulation, as well as psychological symptoms.
Methods: This cross-sectional survey conducted in October 2020 included 2393 healthcare professionals working in departments with a high risk of exposure to COVID-19 from 22 hospitals in Beijing, China. Participants were asked to complete questionnaires measuring pandemic-related job stressors, anxiety, depression, reflective functioning, and cognitive emotion regulation strategies. Path analyses were performed to examine the hypothesized model.
Results: Epidemic-related job stressors had significant direct effects on depression (β =0.31, p < 0.001) and anxiety symptoms (β =0.29, p < 0.001) and the indirect effects through mediation of maladaptive cognitive regulation were also significant (for depression, indirect effect=0.06, SE=0.01, CI=[0.04, 0.07]; for anxiety, indirect effect=0.06, SE=0.01, CI=[0.04, 0.08]). The dimension of certainty about mental states in the reflective functioning questionnaire (RFQc) moderated the direct effect of pandemic-related job stressors on depression (β =− 0.05, p < 0.001) and moderated the effect of job stressors on maladaptive cognitive regulation (β =0.06, p < 0.001).
Conclusion: The results shed light on the roles of cognitive emotion regulation and reflective functioning in coping with pandemic-related job stressors in frontline healthcare workers in periods of dealing with major infectious diseases. The findings have implications for developing interventions for healthcare workers in need.
Keywords: pandemic-related job stressors, mental health, healthcare professionals, reflective functioning, cognitive emotion regulation