The mediating effect of resilience between perceived stress and insomnia in medical staff
10.3760/cma.j.cn371468-20210305-00125
- VernacularTitle:心理弹性在医务人员压力觉知与失眠间的中介效应
- Author:
Lin ZHU
1
;
Dianying LIU
;
Baojuan YE
;
Shaohua LIU
;
Peng XIE
;
Rong ZHANG
Author Information
1. 赣州市第三人民医院心理科 341000
- Keywords:
Resilience;
Perceived stress;
Insomnia;
Medical staff
- From:
Chinese Journal of Behavioral Medicine and Brain Science
2021;30(8):734-739
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To explore the mediating effect of resilience between perceived stress and insomnia in medical staff.Methods:A questionnaire survey was conducted among 1 163 medical staff. All subjects were assessed with the insomnia severity index (ISI), simplified Chinese version of Connor-Davidson resilience scale (CD-RISC-10) and perceived stress scale (PSS-10). SPSS 20.0 software was used for common method biases test, descriptive statistics, difference analysis, correlation analysis, hierarchical regression analysis, and SPSS PROCESS V3.4 was used for Bootstrap mediating effect.Results:①The perceived stress (16.28±6.35) was positively correlated with insomnia (6.14±5.80)( r=0.404, P<0.01), and psychological resilience was negatively correlated with insomnia and perceived stress in medical staff ( r=-0.279, P<0.01, r=-0.399, P<0.01). ②Psychological resilience played a partial mediating role between perceived stress and insomnia in medical staff, with the mediating effect as 0.051, accounting of 13.82% of the total effect. Conclusion:Psychological resilience can reduce the negative effects of perceived stress on sleep and is a protective factor for insomnia in medical staff. Clinically, reducing perceived stress and improving psychological resilience can reduce insomnia in medical staff.