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- Title
The Relationship Between Psychological Vulnerability and Psychological Capital and Health Anxiety Through the Mediating Role of Emotional Processing in Nurses Working in the COVID-19 Units.
- Authors
Mazhari, Rozita; Farhangi, Abdolhassan; Naderi, Farah
- Abstract
Background: Nurses working in COVID -19 units during the pandemic are more likely to be psychologically vulnerable. The present study aimed to investigate the relationship between psychological vulnerability and psychological capital and health anxiety through the mediating role of emotional processing in nurses working in the COVID-19 units during the pandemic. Methods: This is a cross-sectional, correlational study using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). The statistical population of the research was all nurses working in the COVID-19 units of Shiraz City, Iran in 2021. Five hospitals in Shiraz were randomly selected and then, 200 nurses were selected from their COVID-19 units through multistage random sampling. The data were collected by Symptom CheckList-90-Revised (SCL-90-R), the Psychological Capital Questionnaire (PCQ), the Health Anxiety Inventory (HAI), and the Emotional Processing Scale (EPS), and analyzed by AMOS-25 using SEM and Pearson correlation coefficient. The significance level of 0.05 was considered. Results: The results of the SEM suggested that the proposed model fits the data. The results showed a direct relationship between health anxiety and psychological vulnerability (β=0.49; P=0.011). Moreover, there was a negative relationship between psychological capital and psychological vulnerability (β=-0.53; P=0.002), emotional processing and psychological vulnerability (β=-0.67; P=0.031), and health anxiety and emotional processing (β=-0.48; P=0.001). The direct path of psychological capital and emotional processing was not confirmed and eliminated from the final model. According to the results, there was a significant indirect path from health anxiety to psychological vulnerability through the mediating role of emotional processing (P=0.001). Conclusion: Psychological capital and emotional processing could reduce the psychological disturbances caused by working in COVID-19 during the pandemic. Therefore, increasing nurses' psychological capital and improving their emotional processing skills are suggested.
- Subjects
IRAN; PSYCHOLOGICAL stress; THOUGHT &; thinking; WELL-being; STRUCTURAL equation modeling; COVID-19; STATISTICAL reliability; PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability; CROSS-sectional method; SYMPTOM Checklist-90-Revised; HYPOCHONDRIA; RISK assessment; CRONBACH'S alpha; PEARSON correlation (Statistics); HOSPITAL nursing staff; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; QUESTIONNAIRES; INTERPERSONAL relations; AFFECTIVE disorders; ANXIETY; STATISTICAL sampling; DATA analysis software; SENSITIVITY &; specificity (Statistics); PSYCHOTHERAPY; DISEASE risk factors
- Publication
Journal of Client Centered Nursing Care, 2022, Vol 8, Issue 3, p167
- ISSN
2476-4124
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.32598/JCCNC.8.3.429.1