item: #1 of 48 id: cord-000017-gcjgfasj author: Taylor, Melanie R title: Factors influencing psychological distress during a disease epidemic: Data from Australia's first outbreak of equine influenza date: 2008-10-03 words: 5887 flesch: 42 summary: Extremely high levels of non-specific psychological distress were reported by respondents in this study, with 34% reporting high psychological distress (K10 > 22), compared to levels of around 12% in the Australian general population. Analysis, using backward stepwise binary logistic regression analysis, revealed that those living in high risk infection (red) zones (OR = 2.00; 95% CI: 1.57–2.55; p < 0.001) and disease buffer (amber) zones (OR = 1.83; 95% CI: 1.36–2.46; p < 0.001) were at much greater risk of high psychological distress than those living in uninfected (white zones). keywords: affected; age; analysis; animal; areas; australia; bias; control; current; data; department; disease; distress; emotional; equine; farmers; foot; gender; general; government; greater; health; high; high psychological; higher; horse; human; impacts; income; industry; infected; influenza; information; k10; levels; main; mental; nsw; outbreak; owners; paper; people; population; possible; prevalence; psychological; psychological distress; qld; related; reporting; research; respondents; restrictions; risk; sample; scores; social; south; states; study; survey; time; variables; victoria; zones cache: cord-000017-gcjgfasj.txt plain text: cord-000017-gcjgfasj.txt item: #2 of 48 id: cord-018475-h8qwxdtn author: Speckhard, Anne title: Prevention Strategies and Promoting Psychological Resilience to Bioterrorism Through Communication date: 2007 words: 10541 flesch: 38 summary: As many terrorist attacks have been aimed at and timed with elections it is wise for governments to plan ahead how to respond when a candidate is killed, when a terror attack occurs during an election and so forth, so that the processes of democracy do not become derailed. Attachment, trauma and grief responses in women following abortion Complicated mourning: dynamics of impacted post abortion grief Research note: observations of suicidal terrorists in action Posttraumatic and acute stress responses in hostages held by suicidal terrorists in the takeover of a Moscow theater Stockholm effects and psychological responses to captivity in hostages held by suicidal terrorists Report on the NATO Russia advisory panel on mitigating the social and psychological consequences of chemical, biological and radiological terrorism. keywords: ability; acute; anthrax; anxiety; area; attachment; attack; behaviors; biological; bioterrorism; calm; care; case; chemical; chernobyl; children; citizenry; citizens; civil; clear; communication; confidence; contagion; defense; difficult; disaster; disease; dread; effects; emergency; emotional; epidemic; et al; event; exposure; face; facility; fear; future; global; government; groups; health; help; heroic; horror; huge; hysteria; ideology; illness; important; individuals; information; internet; invisible; issues; jihad; known; lethal; likely; mass; media; medical; moscow; need; new; nuclear; officials; panic; people; persons; population; possible; posttraumatic; potential; prepared; psychological; psychosocial; psychosomatic; public; qaeda; real; resilience; resources; responses; ricin; risk; sense; short; similar; small; social; societal; society; sociogenic; speckhard; spread; states; strategies; stress; strong; support; suri; symptoms; systems; term; terrorism; threat; time; toxic; training; united; use; useful; victims; way; weapons; widespread; wmd; workers; world; worried cache: cord-018475-h8qwxdtn.txt plain text: cord-018475-h8qwxdtn.txt item: #3 of 48 id: cord-251962-xeue441p author: Armour, Cherie title: The COVID-19 Psychological Wellbeing Study: Understanding the Longitudinal Psychosocial Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic in the UK; a Methodological Overview Paper date: 2020-11-04 words: 10295 flesch: 46 summary: In recognising this, a team of leading mental health scientists published a position paper detailing a number of mental health research priorities for the UK in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. These included the need for increased monitoring and reporting of the rates of mental health issues and a need to determine the factors that adversely or positively affect mental health during this time. keywords: anxiety; baseline; categories; census; characteristics; collection; completion; concern; coronavirus; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; covid-19 psychological; criteria; current; data; day; deaths; depression; ders; design; disorder; distress; e.g.; england; et al; exposure; family; follow; general; government; groups; health; higher; holmes; impact; individuals; information; item; key; levels; life; lockdown; loneliness; longitudinal; march; meaning; measures; media; members; mental; mental health; month; nations; number; online; pandemic; participants; past; people; place; population; previous; priorities; properties; psychological; psychometric; ptsd; public; questionnaire; questions; range; regulation; related; research; residence; respondents; response; restrictions; result; risk; sample; sars; scale; scores; scotland; self; severe; social; sociodemographic; specific; strategy; study; survey; symptoms; time; university; wales; weekly; wellbeing; wellbeing study cache: cord-251962-xeue441p.txt plain text: cord-251962-xeue441p.txt item: #4 of 48 id: cord-253211-klewqw7u author: Zhang, Yan title: Factors Influencing Mental Health of Medical Workers During the COVID-19 Outbreak date: 2020-09-22 words: 4045 flesch: 39 summary: This is also a wake-up call for psychological workers to remind us to do a good job of psychological intervention and health care even after illness. By contrast, it is highly likely that the backlog of negative emotions causes some mental health issues, especially PTSD, requiring the attention of psychological workers. keywords: analysis; attention; care; china; cognition; confidence; control; coronavirus; covid-19; data; differences; emotional; environment; epidemic; experience; exposure; factors; health; high; infected; infection; items; judgment; level; medical; medical staff; medical workers; mental; mental health; negative; novel; number; outbreak; participants; patients; personal; prevention; psychological; ptsd; questionnaire; results; risk; significant; situation; staff; state; stress; study; table; time; workers; working; wuhan cache: cord-253211-klewqw7u.txt plain text: cord-253211-klewqw7u.txt item: #5 of 48 id: cord-254288-duukt2wh author: Chew, Nicholas W.S. title: A multinational, multicentre study on the psychological outcomes and associated physical symptoms amongst healthcare workers during COVID-19 outbreak date: 2020-04-21 words: 4457 flesch: 39 summary: key: cord-254288-duukt2wh authors: Chew, Nicholas W.S.; Lee, Grace K.H.; Tan, Benjamin Y.Q.; Jing, Mingxue; Goh, Yihui; Ngiam, Nicholas J.H.; Yeo, Leonard L.L.; Ahmad, Aftab; Ahmed Khan, Faheem; Napolean Shanmugam, Ganesh; Sharma, Arvind K.; Komalkumar, R.N.; Meenakshi, P.V.; Shah, Kenam; Patel, Bhargesh; Chan, Bernard P.L.; Sunny, Sibi; Chandra, Bharatendu; Ong, Jonathan J.Y.; Paliwal, Prakash R.; Wong, Lily Y.H.; Sagayanathan, Renarebecca; Chen, Jin Tao; Ying Ng, Alison Ying; Teoh, Hock Luen; Tsivgoulis, Georgios; Ho, Cyrus S.; Ho, Roger C.; Sharma, Vijay K. title: A multinational, multicentre study on the psychological outcomes and associated physical symptoms amongst healthcare workers during COVID-19 outbreak date: 2020-04-21 journal: Brain Behav Immun DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2020.04.049 sha: doc_id: 254288 cord_uid: duukt2wh OBJECTIVE: Since the declaration of the coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak as pandemic, there are reports on the increased prevalence of physical symptoms observed in the general population. We investigated the association between psychological outcomes and physical symptoms among healthcare workers. keywords: acute; anxiety; associated; association; chinese; comorbidities; coronavirus; covid-19; current; dass-21; depression; disease; distress; ebola; et al; general; headache; healthcare; healthcare workers; ies; impact; india; infection; lam; likely; mean; medical; moderate; month; outbreak; outcomes; pandemic; participants; patients; physical; physical symptoms; population; positive; presence; prevalence; previous; psychological; ptsd; public; respiratory; sars; score; severe; singapore; specific; stress; study; survivors; symptoms; table; wang; workers cache: cord-254288-duukt2wh.txt plain text: cord-254288-duukt2wh.txt item: #6 of 48 id: cord-255360-yjn24sja author: O'Connor, Daryl B. title: Research priorities for the COVID‐19 pandemic and beyond: A call to action for psychological science date: 2020-07-19 words: 11221 flesch: 36 summary: Concerns about mental health effects may be particularly heightened for children, who have experienced high levels of disruption to normative developmental opportunities (including opportunities for social and outdoor play) and education, and potentially high levels of family stress (https://emergingminds.org.uk/cospace-study-2ndupdate/). information brief COVID-19 impacts: School shutdown Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in Hong Kong in 2003: Stress and the psychological impact among frontline healthcare workers Psychosocial safety climate as a factor in organisational resilience: Implications for worker psychological health, resilience, and engagement Distress, worry, and functioning following a global health crisis: A national study of Americans' responses to Ebola Work-home interference: How does it manifest itself from day to day? keywords: access; acute; adherence; affected; approaches; associated; behaviour; biological; box; brain; care; challenges; change; children; cognitive; conditions; consequences; coronavirus; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; crisis; data; delivery; development; different; disease; distancing; economic; educational; effective; effects; evidence; example; experience; face; factors; families; family; functioning; future; global; government; groups; health; help; high; home; immediate; impact; important; increase; individuals; instructions; interventions; isolation; key; learning; levels; life; likely; lockdown; long; longer; measures; members; mental; mental health; methods; need; negative; new; online; open; order; organizational; outcomes; pandemic; patients; people; performance; physical; place; policymakers; population; positive; possible; post; potential; practices; priorities; problems; productivity; professional; psychological; psychological science; psychological scientists; public; qualitative; recovery; remote; research; research priorities; resilience; resources; respiratory; restrictions; review; risk; sars; school; science; scientists; self; services; severe; social; stress; studies; support; survey; sustained; systematic; term; time; understanding; unique; use; vulnerable; wider; work; workers; working; young; young people cache: cord-255360-yjn24sja.txt plain text: cord-255360-yjn24sja.txt item: #7 of 48 id: cord-256041-k4y6t0i5 author: Gómez-Salgado, Juan title: Related Health Factors of Psychological Distress During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Spain date: 2020-06-02 words: 5962 flesch: 45 summary: Gen The Psychological Impact of the SARS Epidemic on Hospital Employees in China: Exposure, Risk Perception, and Altruistic Acceptance of Risk Predictive factors of psychological disorder development during recovery following SARS outbreak Factors influencing psychological distress during a disease epidemic: Data from Australia's first outbreak of equine influenza General hospital staff worries, perceived sufficiency of information and associated psychological distress during the A/H1N1 influenza pandemic Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in Hong Kong in 2003: Stress and psychological impact among frontline healthcare workers Psychological impact of the 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak on health care workers in a medium size regional general hospital in Singapore Public perceptions, anxiety, and behaviour change in relation to the swine flu outbreak: Cross sectional telephone survey Demographic and attitudinal determinants of protective behaviours during a pandemic: A review Community Psychological and Behavioral Responses through the First Wave of the 2009 Influenza A(H1N1) Pandemic in Hong Kong Avoidance behaviors and negative psychological responses in the general population in the initial stage of the H1N1 pandemic in Hong Kong A Systematic Review of the Impact of Disaster on the Mental Health of Medical Responders Understanding, compliance and psychological impact of the SARS quarantine experience A Longitudinal Study on the Mental Health of General Population during the COVID-19 Epidemic in China The Impact of COVID-19 Epidemic Declaration on Psychological Consequences: A Study on Active Weibo Users A nationwide survey of psychological distress among Chinese people in the COVID-19 epidemic: Implications and policy recommendations The distress of Iranian adults during the Covid-19 pandemic-More distressed than the Chinese and with different predictors First study on mental distress in Brazil during the COVID-19 crisis A Nationwide Survey of Psychological Distress among Italian People during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Immediate Psychological Responses and Associated Factors Affective temperament, attachment style, and the psychological impact of the COVID-19 outbreak: An early report on the Italian general population Association of Self-perceptions of Aging, Personal and Family Resources The differential psychological distress of populations affected by the COVID-19 pandemic Report of the WHO-China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). In this study, various sociodemographic variables, variables related to the presence of physical symptoms, and other health-related ones have been identified as predictors of the presence of psychological distress symptoms among the Spanish population during a period of health alert due to the COVID-19 epidemic. keywords: 0.001; age; associated; children; china; confinement; contact; covid-19; crisis; data; days; disease; distress; effect; epidemic; general; greater; health; higher; history; impact; infected; level; mental; model; morbidity; number; outbreak; pandemic; participants; people; percentage; person; physical; population; predictive; presence; present; previous; psychiatric; psychological; psychological distress; quarantine; questionnaire; relation; results; risk; sample; sars; self; sex; situation; size; sociodemographic; spanish; studies; study; subjects; symptoms; test; variables; vulnerability; women cache: cord-256041-k4y6t0i5.txt plain text: cord-256041-k4y6t0i5.txt item: #8 of 48 id: cord-256752-x7h4tix2 author: Yu, Hua title: Coping style, social support and psychological distress in the general Chinese population in the early stages of the COVID-19 epidemic date: 2020-08-27 words: 5767 flesch: 40 summary: Differences in demographic characteristics, coping style and social support between respondents who suspected or did not suspect that they had COVID-19 Only one of 256 respondents with suspected infection showed low psychological distress, indicating that suspected cases in our sample had high psychological distress. Social support from partners and family members has been associated with well-being [40] , and existing literature reveals considerable differences in social support among married, formerly married, and never-married people: unmarried people are less likely than married people to report having close family members or friends keywords: active; acute; age; analysis; cases; china; chinese; contact; coronavirus; covid-19; data; day; demographic; disease; distress; education; epidemic; factors; family; general; health; help; high; high psychological; higher; income; individuals; infection; information; items; levels; low; lower; mental; outbreak; pandemic; participants; passive; people; population; province; psychological; psychological distress; questionnaire; regression; respondents; results; risk; sars; scale; score; social; social support; status; strategies; study; style; support; survey; table; time; unmarried; work; wuhan cache: cord-256752-x7h4tix2.txt plain text: cord-256752-x7h4tix2.txt item: #9 of 48 id: cord-257216-0dr6xupy author: Liang, Leilei title: Post-traumatic stress disorder and psychological distress in Chinese youths following the COVID-19 emergency date: 2020-07-06 words: 4651 flesch: 40 summary: key: cord-257216-0dr6xupy authors: Liang, Leilei; Gao, Tingting; Ren, Hui; Cao, Ruilin; Qin, Zeying; Hu, Yueyang; Li, Chuanen; Mei, Songli title: Post-traumatic stress disorder and psychological distress in Chinese youths following the COVID-19 emergency date: 2020-07-06 journal: J Health Psychol DOI: 10.1177/1359105320937057 sha: doc_id: 257216 cord_uid: 0dr6xupy This study aims to explore the relationship between psychological distress and post-traumatic stress disorder among Chinese participants as the result of COVID-19 outbreak. The results indicated that 12.8% of all participants with the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and the effects of psychological distress on post-traumatic stress disorder was mediated by negative coping style. keywords: addition; adolescents; analysis; anxiety; association; china; chinese; coronavirus; covid-19; depression; differences; disaster; disease; disorder; distress; earthquake; effect; emergency; et al; events; factors; gender; general; health; life; males; medical; mental; model; ncs; negative; outbreak; participants; patients; people; post; posttraumatic; prevalence; psychological; psychological distress; ptsd; public; questionnaire; related; relationship; research; results; risk; scale; significant; social; stress disorder; studies; study; style; survivors; symptoms; traumatic; use; women; years cache: cord-257216-0dr6xupy.txt plain text: cord-257216-0dr6xupy.txt item: #10 of 48 id: cord-258879-dueab356 author: Imran, Nazish title: Psychological impact of COVID-19 pandemic on postgraduate trainees: a cross-sectional survey date: 2020-08-25 words: 3882 flesch: 42 summary: ► High psychological distress among postgraduate trainees during COVID-19 pandemic is reported in Pakistan. Our study contributes to literature on prevalence of psychological symptoms in postgraduate trainees. keywords: acute; adequate; analysis; anxiety; bmj; care; covid-19; cross; data; depression; disorder; distress; doctors; factors; female; hcws; health; high; higher; impact; item; junior; line; literature; medical; mental; morbidity; outbreak; pakistan; pandemic; patients; postgraduate; prevalence; psychological; questionnaire; research; residents; results; review; risk; sample; score; sectional; senior; stress; studies; study; survey; symptoms; table; trainees; training; workers cache: cord-258879-dueab356.txt plain text: cord-258879-dueab356.txt item: #11 of 48 id: cord-259562-e1htl489 author: Petzold, Moritz Bruno title: Risk, resilience, psychological distress, and anxiety at the beginning of the COVID‐19 pandemic in Germany date: 2020-07-07 words: 3510 flesch: 44 summary: Interestingly, personal experiences with COVID-19 were not strongly connected to COVID-19 anxiety. This is undermined by our finding that self-efficacy (meaning a person's believe in his or her own ability to master situations or show a certain behavior) showed essential significant negative correlations with COVID-19 anxiety. keywords: anxiety; average; committee; consequences; covid-19; current; data; day; depression; distress; efficacy; factors; general; germany; health; healthcare; higher; infected; infection; items; longitudinal; medical; mental; negative; online; outbreak; pandemic; participants; population; protective; psychological; questionnaire; range; results; risk; sample; scale; score; self; severe; situation; social; studies; study; survey; symptoms; tan; virus cache: cord-259562-e1htl489.txt plain text: cord-259562-e1htl489.txt item: #12 of 48 id: cord-262428-erlmyzwn author: CABARKAPA, Sonja title: The psychological impact of COVID-19 and other viral epidemics on frontline healthcare workers and ways to address it: A rapid systematic review date: 2020-09-17 words: 5593 flesch: 46 summary: A study 2 of 1,557 nurses identified three attitudinal factors J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f (health fear, social isolation and job stress) mediated the association between contact with SARS patients and psychological stress. The Psychiatric quarterly Prevalence of psychological symptoms among Ebola survivors and healthcare workers during the 2014-2015 Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone: a crosssectional study The psychological impact of the SARS epidemic on hospital employees in China: exposure, risk perception, and altruistic acceptance of risk Psychological impact of the 2015 MERS outbreak on hospital workers and quarantined hemodialysis patients Psychological effects of the SARS outbreak in Hong Kong on high-risk health care workers Psychological impact of the 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak on health care workers in a medium size regional general hospital in Singapore Risk Perception and Impact of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) on Work and Personal Lives of Healthcare Workers in Singapore keywords: acute; anxiety; care; china; contact; coronavirus; covid-19; cross; depression; disease; disorders; distress; doctors; ebola; epidemics; factors; families; fear; findings; frontline; general; greater; hcws; health; healthcare; higher; hospital; impact; implications; infected; infection; insomnia; levels; likely; measures; medical; mental; mental health; mers; novel; nurses; outbreak; pandemic; patients; psychiatric; psychological; r n; research; review; risk; sars; sectional; severe; social; staff; stress; studies; study; support; symptoms; syndrome; wellbeing; workers; wuhan cache: cord-262428-erlmyzwn.txt plain text: cord-262428-erlmyzwn.txt item: #13 of 48 id: cord-264986-glm2qcuz author: Tam, Cheuk Chi title: Psychological Distress Among HIV Healthcare Providers During the COVID-19 Pandemic in China: Mediating Roles of Institutional Support and Resilience date: 2020-10-21 words: 4831 flesch: 31 summary: However, limited COVID-19 research examined the mechanisms of psychological distress among HIV healthcare providers. Psychological distress among HIV healthcare providers in China could be particularly concerning due to several COVID-19 related stressors at HIV clinics. keywords: analysis; anxiety; association; china; chinese; clinics; correlated; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; covid-19 stressors; current; data; delta; depression; distress; ecological; effect; factors; guangxi; healthcare; healthcare providers; higher; hiv; hiv healthcare; indirect; institute; institutional; institutional support; intrapersonal; items; level; medical; model; online; organizational; outbreak; p =; pandemic; participants; personal; providers; psychological; psychological distress; psychological health; public; relationship; research; resilience; responses; results; scale; score; self; significant; stressors; studies; study; support; survey; variables; workers cache: cord-264986-glm2qcuz.txt plain text: cord-264986-glm2qcuz.txt item: #14 of 48 id: cord-266248-4dne908n author: Um Min Allah, Nasar title: The psychological impact of coronavirus outbreak in Pakistan date: 2020-08-06 words: 458 flesch: 42 summary: Recent studies have shown that the psychological effects of quarantine may be huge, leading to a variety of mental health issues ranging from anxiety and frustration to sleep disruptions, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (Brooks et al., 2020; Kang et al., 2020 ), yet the repercussions for the emotional well-being of people cannot be ignored. Psychiatrists and mental health experts will be worth sitting in the COVID-19 task force to advise on social and mental health initiatives and psychological intervention. keywords: authors; disease; effects; health; impact; long; mental; people; psychological; quarantine cache: cord-266248-4dne908n.txt plain text: cord-266248-4dne908n.txt item: #15 of 48 id: cord-267691-whn49c79 author: Rooney, L. title: ‘Policing’ a pandemic: Garda wellbeing and COVID-19 date: 2020-05-28 words: 3506 flesch: 35 summary: Furthermore, research not only indicates that heighted levels of psychological distress are an occupational hazard associated with the law enforcement profession, but that members of the Garda Síochána feel their mental health needs are largely unmet by their organisation. The duties of the Garda Síochána stretch far beyond 'traditional' modes of policing, such as solving crime and law enforcement. keywords: cism; covid-19; critical; distress; enforcement; essential; et al; frontline; future; garda; government; gratitude; health; healthcare; help; incident; instance; irish; justice; law; levels; lockdown; management; measures; media; members; mental; needs; occupational; officers; officials; pandemic; people; police; policing; practice; professionals; psychological; public; research; response; services; social; staff; stress; stressors; support; symptoms; síochána; time; trauma; traumatic; vulnerable; wellbeing; work cache: cord-267691-whn49c79.txt plain text: cord-267691-whn49c79.txt item: #16 of 48 id: cord-269245-bp4q4plt author: Zhang, Yuan title: Status and influential factors of anxiety depression and insomnia symptoms in the work resumption period of COVID-19 epidemic: A multicenter cross-sectional study date: 2020-09-18 words: 2844 flesch: 38 summary: However, more attention In the present study, only 17.4% of current participants had received psychological interventions, 5.2% had received individual psychological interventions during the outbreak of COVID-19. During the epidemic, 17.4% of the participants had received psychological interventions, and only 5.2% had received individual interventions. keywords: aged; analysis; anxiety; china; control; coronavirus; covid-19; cross; depression; disease; distress; epidemic; face; factors; health; insomnia; insomnia symptoms; interpersonal; interventions; investigation; isi; isolation; logistic; mental; outbreak; participants; people; period; present; previous; proportion; psychological; resumption; risk; sampling; scores; severe; status; study; symptoms; work cache: cord-269245-bp4q4plt.txt plain text: cord-269245-bp4q4plt.txt item: #17 of 48 id: cord-269476-lrk4ty99 author: Mohammed, Abdulaziz title: An evaluation of psychological distress and social support of survivors and contacts of Ebola virus disease infection and their relatives in Lagos, Nigeria: a cross sectional study − 2014 date: 2015-08-27 words: 3930 flesch: 43 summary: In a descriptive cross sectional study, we used General Health Questionnaire to assess psychological distress and Oslo Social Support Scale to assess social support among 117 participants who survived EVD, listed as EVD contacts or their relatives at Ebola Emergency Operation Center in Lagos, Nigeria. The evaluation could not interview the anticipated number of relatives because some of the contacts did not inform their immediate family members about their status as EVD contacts and therefore could not be interviewed. keywords: able; aor; case; clinical; contacts; depressed; depression; disease; disorders; distress; ebola; education; evd; fear; general; health; infection; lagos; loss; management; mental; nigeria; outbreak; participants; patients; people; persons; population; predictor; psychological; psychological distress; psychosocial; public; questionnaire; relation; relatives; respondents; response; risk; sample; size; social; study; support; survivors; team; unhappy cache: cord-269476-lrk4ty99.txt plain text: cord-269476-lrk4ty99.txt item: #18 of 48 id: cord-271362-qn5i6cdj author: Zheng, Lei title: Perceived Control Buffers the Effects of the COVID‐19 Pandemic on General Health and Life Satisfaction: The Mediating Role of Psychological Distance date: 2020-09-21 words: 5591 flesch: 37 summary: This study found that perceived control could moderate the mediating effect of psychological distance, in which perceived control not only buffers the detrimental effects of regional pandemic severity on psychological distance, but also alleviates the negative impact of psychological distance from COVID-19 on perceived life satisfaction. This study aimed to examine the effects of COVID‐19 on life satisfaction and perceived general health and reveal the buffering effect of perceived control on coping with COVID‐19. keywords: affected; cases; china; control; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; data; distance; effects; et al; general; general health; health; high; impact; important; individuals; levels; life; life satisfaction; low; mental; model; moderating; negative; number; outcomes; pandemic; pandemic severity; participants; particular; people; present; previous; problems; psychological; psychological distance; public; regional; regional pandemic; regions; relationship; results; satisfaction; severity; size; studies; study cache: cord-271362-qn5i6cdj.txt plain text: cord-271362-qn5i6cdj.txt item: #19 of 48 id: cord-273998-e7m5g242 author: Que, Jianyu title: Psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on healthcare workers: a cross-sectional study in China date: 2020-06-14 words: 4866 flesch: 38 summary: key: cord-273998-e7m5g242 authors: Que, Jianyu; Shi, Le; Deng, Jiahui; Liu, Jiajia; Zhang, Li; Wu, Suying; Gong, Yimiao; Huang, Weizhen; Yuan, Kai; Yan, Wei; Sun, Yankun; Ran, Maosheng; Bao, Yanping; Lu, Lin title: Psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on healthcare workers: a cross-sectional study in China date: 2020-06-14 journal: Gen Psychiatr DOI: 10.1136/gpsych-2020-100259 sha: doc_id: 273998 cord_uid: e7m5g242 BACKGROUND: Healthcare workers fighting against the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic are under tremendous pressure, which puts them at an increased risk of developing psychological problems. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence of psychological problems in different healthcare workers (ie, physicians, medical residents, nurses, technicians and public health professionals) during the COVID-19 pandemic in China and explore factors that are associated with the onset of psychological problems in this population during this public health crisis. keywords: anxiety; attention; china; choice; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; depression; different; disorder; factors; feedback; findings; free; healthcare; healthcare workers; higher; information; insomnia; line; line work; medical; mental; mild; moderate; negative; nurses; outbreak; overall; overall psychological; pandemic; physicians; prevalence; problems; professionals; psychological; psychological problems; public; questionnaire; residents; risk; sars; score; severe; stress; study; survey; symptoms; technicians; workers cache: cord-273998-e7m5g242.txt plain text: cord-273998-e7m5g242.txt item: #20 of 48 id: cord-274677-7kcoodyv author: Dobson, Hanna title: Burnout and psychological distress amongst Australian healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic date: 2020-10-12 words: 1699 flesch: 38 summary: National Mental Health Survey of Doctors and Medical Students Depression in hospital-employed nurses Understanding the burnout experience Focus on mental health during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic Burnout and Joy in the profession of critical care medicine Factors associated with mental health outcomes among health care workers exposed to coronavirus disease 2019 Mental health outcomes among frontline and second-line health care workers during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Italy Prevalence of depression, anxiety, and insomnia among healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic Validation and utility of a self-report version of PRIME-MD A brief measure for assessing generalized anxiety disorder Assessing psychological trauma and PTSD Psychometric analysis and refinement of the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) key: cord-274677-7kcoodyv authors: Dobson, Hanna; Malpas, Charles B; Burrell, Aidan JC; Gurvich, Caroline; Chen, Leo; Kulkarni, Jayashri; Winton-Brown, Tobias title: Burnout and psychological distress amongst Australian healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic date: 2020-10-12 journal: Australas Psychiatry DOI: 10.1177/1039856220965045 sha: doc_id: 274677 cord_uid: 7kcoodyv OBJECTIVE: To examine psychological distress in healthcare workers (HCWs) during the COVID-19 pandemic in April–May 2020. keywords: anxiety; burnout; covid-19; depression; distress; hcws; health; history; hospital; item; levels; line; medical; mental; outcomes; pandemic; participants; psychiatric; psychological; ptsd; range; research; resilience; senior; staff; study; survey; symptoms; table; workers cache: cord-274677-7kcoodyv.txt plain text: cord-274677-7kcoodyv.txt item: #21 of 48 id: cord-274774-klystgj4 author: Huang, Naizhu title: How Incivility and Academic Stress Influence Psychological Health among College Students: The Moderating Role of Gratitude date: 2020-05-06 words: 4338 flesch: 41 summary: Psychometric study of depression, anxiety and stress among university students Psychological distress: Concept analysis Making mental health a global priority Depression and Other Common Mental Disorders: Global Health Estimates; World Health Organization The prevalence and socio-demographic correlations of depression, anxiety and stress among a group of university students Changes in undergraduate students' Psychological well-being as they experience university life Impacts of socio-cultural environment and lifestyle factors on the psychological health of university students in Bangladesh: A longitudinal study Qualitative and quantitative analyses of psycho-logical distress: Methodological complementarity and ontological incommensurability Conservation of resources: A new attempt at conceptualizing stress Correlations among Work Stressors, Work Stress Responses, and Subjective Well-Being of Civil Servants: Empirical Evidence from China A meta-analytic test of the challenge stressor-hindrance stressor framework: An explanation for inconsistent relationships among stress and performance The Relationship between Challenge and Hindrance Stressors and Emotional Exhaustion: The Moderating Role of Perceived Servant Leadership Stress at college: Effects on health habits, health status and self-esteem College students: Mental health problems and treatment considerations How rude! Exploring variations by gender The debt of gratitude: Dissociating gratitude and indebtedness The level of student incivility: The need of a policy to regulate college student civility This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license We would like to thank the students at a Chinese university for their participation in this study. keywords: academic; academic stress; addition; age; analysis; china; chinese; college; common; data; distress; effect; factor; family; female; gender; grateful; gratitude; health; higher; incivility; income; item; level; low; mental; method; model; participants; problems; psychological; psychological distress; relationship; research; results; sample; scale; significant; stress; students; study; survey; university; variables; variance; wellbeing cache: cord-274774-klystgj4.txt plain text: cord-274774-klystgj4.txt item: #22 of 48 id: cord-289378-ghmqd3yv author: Wang, Peng-Wei title: Subjective Deterioration of Physical and Psychological Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Taiwan: Their Association with the Adoption of Protective Behaviors and Mental Health Problems date: 2020-09-18 words: 6484 flesch: 34 summary: It is reasonable to hypothesize that the deterioration of psychological health is significantly associated with sleep problems and suicidal ideation that have become more prevalent during the COVID-19 pandemic, whether the deterioration of physical health is significantly associated with sleep problems and suicidal ideation bears further exploration. The impact of physical activity on psychological health during Covid-19 pandemic in Italy COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on mental health of healthcare professionals Social Learning Theory and the Health Belief Model Fear and the 2019-nCoV outbreak Immediate Psychological Responses and Associated Factors during the Initial Stage of the 2019 Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Epidemic among the General Population in China The psychological impact of quarantine and how to reduce it: Rapid review of the evidence Anxiety, worry and cognitive risk estimate in relation to protective behaviors during the 2009 influenza A/H1N1 pandemic in Hong Kong: Ten cross-sectional surveys The Effects of Social Support on Sleep Quality of Medical Staff Treating Patients with Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in January and February 2020 in China Generalized anxiety disorder, depressive symptoms and sleep quality during COVID-19 outbreak in China: A web-based cross-sectional survey Factors Associated With Mental Health Outcomes Among Health Care Workers Exposed to Coronavirus Disease A longitudinal study on the mental health of general population during the COVID-19 epidemic in China The impact of community psychological responses on outbreak control for severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong Human Factors Considerations in Using Personal Protective Equipment in the COVID-19 Pandemic Context: A Bi-national Survey Study Aggregated COVID-19 suicide incidences in India: Fear of COVID-19 infection is the prominent causative factor COVID-19-Related Information Sources and Their Relationships with Confidence of People in Coping with COVID-19: A Facebook Survey Study in Taiwan (Preprint) Changes in Sex Life among People in Taiwan during the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Roles of Risk Perception, General Anxiety, and Demographic Characteristics COVID-19-Related Factors Associated with Sleep Disturbance and Suicidal Thoughts among the Taiwanese Public: A Facebook Survey Psychosocial impact among the public of the severe acute respiratory syndrome epidemic in Taiwan Social support measurement Reliability and factorial structure of the Chinese version of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory State Trait Anxiety Inventory: A Test Manual/Test Form Predictive validity of a five-item symptom checklist to screen psychiatric morbidity and suicide ideation in general population and psychiatric settings Development and verification of validity and reliability of a short screening instrument to identify psychiatric morbidity The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations Social media divide: Characteristics of emerging adults who do not use social network websites The Use of Facebook in Recruiting Participants for Health Research Purposes: A Systematic Review Social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic can increase physical inactivity and the global burden of cardiovascular disease Using eHealth to Support COVID-19 Education, Self-Assessment, and Symptom Monitoring in the Netherlands: Observational Study COVID-19 related stress exacerbates common physical and mental pathologies and affects treatment (Review) Infodemic and Emerging Issues through a Data Lens: The Case of China Theoretical explanations for maintenance of behaviour change: A systematic review of behaviour theories Estudio de la relación del entorno psicosocial en la práctica deportiva de la mujer Prevalence and Predictors of Anxiety and Depression Symptoms during the COVID-19 Pandemic and Compliance with Precautionary Measures: Age and Sex Matter Public behavior change, perceptions, depression, and anxiety in relation to the COVID-19 outbreak © 2020 by the authors keywords: adoption; affective; age; anxiety; aor; associated; association; behaviors; characteristics; china; cognitive; constructs; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; crowded; data; demographic; deterioration; disease; facebook; factors; gender; general; health problems; higher; impact; information; medical; mental health; outbreak; pandemic; participants; people; physical; physical health; places; problems; protective; psychological health; public; questionnaire; questions; related; respondents; results; review; sars; self; sleep; social; study; subjective; subjective deterioration; support; table; taiwan; week cache: cord-289378-ghmqd3yv.txt plain text: cord-289378-ghmqd3yv.txt item: #23 of 48 id: cord-291643-c8dgf7mx author: Shahrour, Ghada title: Acute Stress Disorder, Coping Self‐Efficacy, and Subsequent Psychological Distress among Nurses Amid COVID‐19 date: 2020-08-07 words: 4217 flesch: 45 summary: A plethora of trauma-related articles on psychological distress have reported women having higher psychological distress than men (e.g., Hansen & Ghafoori, 2017; Jayawardene et al., 2013) . This study aims to establish the prevalence of acute stress disorder and predictors of psychological distress among Jordanian nurses. keywords: acute; age; anxiety; article; asd; benight; coping; copyright; covid-19; cse; data; depression; disorder; distress; efficacy; et al; experience; gender; healthcare; higher; income; individuals; items; jordanian; mental; nurses; participants; patients; personal; predictors; prevalence; psychological; psychological distress; ptsd; research; reserved; rights; sample; scale; self; significant; study; survey; symptoms; total; trauma; traumatic; women; workers cache: cord-291643-c8dgf7mx.txt plain text: cord-291643-c8dgf7mx.txt item: #24 of 48 id: cord-300229-9qh7efs4 author: Inchausti, Felix title: Psychological Intervention and COVID-19: What We Know So Far and What We Can Do date: 2020-05-27 words: 5193 flesch: 32 summary: Psychotherapy relationships that workevidence-based therapist contributions Do no harm: Balancing the costs and benefits of patient outcomes in health psychology research and practice Negotiating the therapeutic alliance: A relational treatment guide The 2014 Ebola outbreak and mental health: Current status and recommended response Trauma signature analysis Impact of economic crises on mental health care: A systematic review The psychology of pandemics. The coronavirus COVID-19 and the global pandemic has already had a substantial disruptive impact on society, posing major challenges to the provision of mental health services in a time of crisis, and carrying the spectre of an increased burden to mental health, both in terms of existing psychiatric disorder, and emerging psychological distress from the pandemic. keywords: acute; anxiety; associated; care; cases; challenges; china; client; clinical; clinicians; conditions; coronavirus; covid-19; crisis; current; delivery; disease; disorders; distancing; distress; et al; evidence; experience; face; feelings; frontline; groups; health; healthcare; human; impact; important; individuals; interventions; levels; literature; lockdown; medical; mental; mental health; moderate; need; new; novel; ones; outbreak; pandemic; patients; people; possible; present; previous; professionals; psychiatric; psychological; psychotherapy; public; quarantine; respiratory; response; review; risk; self; sense; severe; social; specific; support; symptoms; systems; therapeutic; therapist; therapy; treatment; use; video; work cache: cord-300229-9qh7efs4.txt plain text: cord-300229-9qh7efs4.txt item: #25 of 48 id: cord-305941-277iqp0u author: Bozdağ, Faruk title: Psychological Resilience of Healthcare Professionals During COVID-19 Pandemic date: 2020-10-13 words: 5266 flesch: 35 summary: Therefore, this study aims to probe psychological resilience of healthcare workers. Doctors constitute the group with the lowest levels of psychological resilience among healthcare workers. keywords: affect; affective; age; analysis; anxiety; coronavirus; covid-19; current; depression; doctors; emotions; environmental; et al; experience; factors; healthcare; healthcare professionals; healthcare workers; higher; impact; individual; items; level; life; mental; model; needs; negative; order; outbreak; pandemic; people; point; positive; precautions; problems; professionals; psychological; psychological resilience; quality; research; resilience; risk; satisfaction; scale; services; sleep; state; stress; studies; study; support; turkish; variables; version; virus; workers cache: cord-305941-277iqp0u.txt plain text: cord-305941-277iqp0u.txt item: #26 of 48 id: cord-306729-oa9i4ss9 author: Luo, Li-Sha title: COVID-19: Presumed Infection Routes and Psychological Impact on Staff in Administrative and Logistics Departments in a Designated Hospital in Wuhan, China date: 2020-06-12 words: 3084 flesch: 39 summary: The current study thus aimed to explore the potential infection routes and psychological changes among hospital staff in ALDs and to provide scientific suggestions on preventing adverse effects among this population's during large-scale infectious diseases outbreaks. The results indicated that working in hospital and having clinical professional knowledge does not affect the psychological impact of COVID-19 epidemic on hospital staff. keywords: alds; attitude; changes; china; control; coronavirus; covid-19; departments; diagnosis; disease; doctors; effects; emotional; epidemic; gloves; healthcare; hospital; impact; infected; infection; logistics; masks; measures; medical; members; mental; nurses; outbreak; protective; psychological; sars; staff; stress; studies; study; treatment; workers; wuhan cache: cord-306729-oa9i4ss9.txt plain text: cord-306729-oa9i4ss9.txt item: #27 of 48 id: cord-307263-znuqdzdp author: Sun, Niuniu title: A Qualitative Study on the Psychological Experience of Caregivers of COVID-19 Patients date: 2020-04-08 words: 4483 flesch: 47 summary: Psychological research as the phenomenologist views it Working experiences of nurses during the Middle East respiratory syndrome outbreak Facing SARS: psychological impacts on SARS team nurses and psychiatric services in a Taiwan general hospital Nat ional Healt h Commission of the People's Republic o f China. Situation Report -39 Update on pneumonia of new coronavirus infect ion as of 24:00 on China Disease Control Report: more than 3,000 medical staff infected with new crown virus Ethical and legal challenges associated wit h disaster nursing Nurses' beliefs about public healt h emergencies: fear of abandonment SARS: caring for patients in Hong Kong Nurses' experiences of care for patients wit h Middle East respiratory syndrome-coronavirus in South Korea Healt hcare worker semotions, perceived stressors and coping strategies during MERS-CoV outbreak Sources and symptoms of stress among nurses in the first Chinese ant i-Ebola medical team during the Sierra Leone aid mission: A qualitat ive study New Zealand nurses percept ions of caringfor patients with influenza A (H1N1) Prevalence of psychiatric morbidit y and psychological adaptat ion of the nurses in a structured SARS caring unit during outbreak: A prospect ive and periodic assessment study in Taiwan keywords: adjust; anti; anxiety; care; caregivers; cases; children; china; colleagues; control; coronavirus; covid-19; data; disease; early; emotions; epidemic; experience; family; fear; growth; health; important; initiative; interviews; knowledge; medical; mental; method; negative; new; novel; nurses; nursing; outbreak; participants; patients; phenomenological; physical; pneumonia; positive; pressure; prevention; professional; psychological; research; respiratory; sars; self; social; stress; studies; study; support; tasks; team; time; training; ward; work cache: cord-307263-znuqdzdp.txt plain text: cord-307263-znuqdzdp.txt item: #28 of 48 id: cord-309273-gtvi37gh author: Flesia, Luca title: Predicting Perceived Stress Related to the Covid-19 Outbreak through Stable Psychological Traits and Machine Learning Models date: 2020-10-19 words: 7913 flesch: 40 summary: A more complete descriptive analysis of each variable, including the composition of high perceived stress versus low perceived stress samples, is reported in the Supplementary Materials. The effects of psychological stress on depression Chronic stress, hair cortisol and depression: A prospective and longitudinal study of medical internship Heightened biological stress response during exposure to a trauma film predicts an increase in intrusive memories A direct test of the diathesis-stress model for depression Psychological stress and coping in adaptation and illness Recommended psychological crisis intervention response to the 2019 novel coronavirus pneumonia outbreak in China: A model of West China Hospital. keywords: age; analysis; associated; average; behavior; bfi-10; chinese; class; control; coronavirus; covid-19; data; differences; dispositional; distress; education; efficacy; emergency; emotional; epidemic; events; external; factors; gender; health; high; higher; impact; important; income; individual; internal; italian; item; learning; levels; life; living; locus; lower; machine; materials; measures; mental; model; normative; online; outbreak; outcomes; pandemic; participants; people; personality; persons; physical; population; positive; predictors; present; protective; pss-10; psychological; questionnaire; regression; reported; research; responses; results; risk; role; sample; sars; scale; score; self; set; significant; social; sociodemographic; stability; stable; strategies; stress; stressful; studies; study; supplementary; symptoms; test; traits; variables cache: cord-309273-gtvi37gh.txt plain text: cord-309273-gtvi37gh.txt item: #29 of 48 id: cord-313716-pw0odm88 author: Moccia, Lorenzo title: Affective temperament, attachment style, and the psychological impact of the COVID-19 outbreak: an early report on the Italian general population date: 2020-04-20 words: 2839 flesch: 30 summary: To fit our aims, we subdivided our sample into three groups according to K10 cutoffs: 1) subjects without likelihood of psychological distress, 2) subjects with likelihood of mild psychological distress, and 3) subjects with likelihood of moderateto-severe psychological distress. In our sample (n=500), 62% of the individuals reported no likelihood of psychological distress, whereas 19.4% and 18.6% displayed mild and moderate-to-severe likelihood. keywords: aas; affective; anxious; asq; attachment; closeness; confidence; covid-19; cyclothymic; depressive; discomfort; distress; early; factors; gender; general; health; impact; individuals; italian; likelihood; measures; mental; mild; moderate; outbreak; pandemic; participants; population; protective; psychological; psychological distress; questionnaire; response; results; risk; sample; self; severe; social; study; style; subjects; survey; temperament cache: cord-313716-pw0odm88.txt plain text: cord-313716-pw0odm88.txt item: #30 of 48 id: cord-314719-qi8gilkr author: Dawson, David L. title: COVID-19: Psychological Flexibility, Coping, Mental Health, and Wellbeing in the UK during the pandemic date: 2020-07-30 words: 6990 flesch: 27 summary: The Lancet Psychiatry Comparing the reliability and validity of global self-report measures of subjective well-being with experiential day reconstruction measures The 1-year impact of severe acute respiratory syndrome on pulmonary function, exercise capacity, and quality of life in a cohort of survivors Psychological interventions for patients with cancer: psychological flexibility and the potential utility of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Coronavirus Resource Center Coping and experiential avoidance: Unique or overlapping constructs Experiential avoidance as a generalized psychological vulnerability: Comparisons with coping and emotion regulation strategies Psychological flexibility as a fundamental aspect of health The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure Quality of life and psychological status in survivors of severe acute respiratory syndrome at 3 months postdischarge Stress and psychological distress among SARS survivors 1 year after the outbreak An initial meta-analysis of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for treating substance use disorders. However, psychological flexibility was significantly and positively associated with greater wellbeing, and inversely related to anxiety, depression, and COVID-19-related distress. keywords: ability; acceptance; acute; adherence; age; analyses; anxiety; approach; associated; associations; avoidance; avoidant; behaviours; brief; clinical; coefficients; commitment; context; cope; coping; coronavirus; covid-19; current; data; demographic; depression; distress; effects; et al; event; experiential; findings; flexibility; focal; greater; health; higher; impact; indirect; individual; interest; kashdan; levels; life; living; magnitude; measures; mental; models; multiple; outcomes; pandemic; participants; people; population; potential; predictor; process; psychological; psychological flexibility; relationships; report; research; responses; review; sample; scale; scores; self; severe; significant; situational; small; social; specific; strategies; study; symptoms; term; therapy; time; understanding; unique; use; variables; wellbeing; work; worried cache: cord-314719-qi8gilkr.txt plain text: cord-314719-qi8gilkr.txt item: #31 of 48 id: cord-315629-ktck9y12 author: Lian, Shuai-Lei title: Mobile phone addiction and psychological distress among Chinese adolescents: The mediating role of rumination and moderating role of the capacity to be alone date: 2020-10-07 words: 8365 flesch: 34 summary: key: cord-315629-ktck9y12 authors: Lian, Shuai-Lei; Sun, Xiao-Jun; Niu, Geng-Feng; Yang, Xiu-Juan; Zhou, Zong-Kui; Yang, Chen title: Mobile phone addiction and psychological distress among Chinese adolescents: The mediating role of rumination and moderating role of the capacity to be alone date: 2020-10-07 journal: J Affect Disord DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2020.10.005 sha: doc_id: 315629 cord_uid: ktck9y12 BACKGROUND: With the increasing incidence of mobile phone addiction, mobile phone addiction has been considered to be related to adolescents’ psychological distress. The present study tested the mediating role of rumination and the moderating role of the capacity to be alone in the relation between mobile phone addiction and psychological distress. keywords: addicts; adolescents; adverse; anxiety; attention; capacity; chen; chinese; cognitive; coping; depression; direct; distress; effect; emotional; emotions; et al; events; excessive; experience; fan; feinstein; health; high; higher; hoeksema; important; indirect; individuals; larson; levels; life; link; liu; lower; mechanisms; mediation; mental; mindfulness; mobile phone; model; moderated; negative; networking; nolen; phone addiction; phones; positive; present; previous; problems; psychological; psychological distress; quality; relation; relationship; research; response; role; rumination; scale; self; significant; sleep; smartphone; social; solitary; solitude; students; studies; study; style; symptoms; time; use; yang; zhou cache: cord-315629-ktck9y12.txt plain text: cord-315629-ktck9y12.txt item: #32 of 48 id: cord-317857-of1w23xr author: Dan, Zhaokui title: China adopts non-contact free consultation to help the public cope with the psychological pressure caused by new coronavirus pneumonia date: 2020-04-10 words: 880 flesch: 45 summary: As psychiatrists can play pivotal role in supporting the well-being of those affected and their families, the at-risk healthcare staff as well as the public (Banerjee, 2020) , the local government have organized psychological consultation team and mental health team to provide free psychological consultation service to relieve J o u r n a l P r e -p r o The professional psychological doctors who have received the psychological assistance training in response to the 2019-nCoV provide psychological consultation for the public. keywords: china; consultation; contact; coronavirus; epidemic; free; health; local; mental; non; novel; people; pneumonia; pressure; psychological; public cache: cord-317857-of1w23xr.txt plain text: cord-317857-of1w23xr.txt item: #33 of 48 id: cord-320228-vbzceozs author: Hu, Zhi-Hua title: Post-disaster evacuation and temporary resettlement considering panic and panic spread date: 2014-11-30 words: 10606 flesch: 46 summary: (3) When weights of the costs returned by solving [M2] and [M3] are equal, the resulting solutions indicate that building costs have almost the same tendency during the first 10 days, whereas the other three costs (psychological penalty cost, psychological intervention cost, and transportation cost) are distributed differently (Fig. 7) . When the four costs are equally weighted, psychological penalty cost is high while psychological intervention cost is minimized (Fig. 7(1a) ). keywords: affected; areas; building; capacity; considered; cost; data; days; decision; degree; determined; disaster; disaster victims; earthquake; effects; emergency; evacuated; evacuation; experimental; factors; fig; function; health; high; homeless; houses; housing; increase; infective; initial; intervention; intervention cost; mental; model; monetary; nip; number; p t; panic; panic degree; panic spread; parameters; penalty; penalty cost; people; period; post; problem; processes; psychological; psychological intervention; psychological penalty; psychology; research; resettlement; resettlement sites; resources; response; results; risk; second; section; shadow; shelters; sites; social; solutions; spread; step; strength; studies; study; susceptible; t;s; temporary; temporary resettlement; time; time t; transportation; victims; wait; wenchuan; workers cache: cord-320228-vbzceozs.txt plain text: cord-320228-vbzceozs.txt item: #34 of 48 id: cord-322835-09t833wc author: O’Donovan, Róisín title: Exploring psychological safety in healthcare teams to inform the development of interventions: combining observational, survey and interview data date: 2020-08-31 words: 8168 flesch: 49 summary: Team members would withhold their true feelings to try to keep the peace, incubate the mess in front of everybody and to avoid making other team members feel attacked. The effects of power, leadership and psychological safety on resident event reporting Finding antecedents of psychological safety: a step toward quality improvement Managing the risk of learning: Psychological safety in work teams Moving toward improved teamwork in cancer care: the role of psychological safety in team communication Assertion practices and beliefs among nurses and physicians on an inpatient pediatric medical unit Towards an observational measure for team psychological safety [dissertation Reaping the benefits of task conflict in teams: the critical role of team psychological safety climate Study design in qualitative research-2: sampling and data collection strategies Case study research and applications: design and methods. keywords: analysis; approach; behaviour; collection; comfortable; concerns; conflict; data; depth; development; different; familiarity; healthcare; healthcare teams; hospital; important; interventions; interviews; issues; kind; lack; leader; learning; level; measure; meetings; members; methods; need; new; observations; open; order; participants; patient; people; psychological; psychological safety; relationships; research; response; results; role; safety; section; silence; study; support; supportive; survey; team; team leader; team members; time; understanding; use; voice; work cache: cord-322835-09t833wc.txt plain text: cord-322835-09t833wc.txt item: #35 of 48 id: cord-324092-ertcvh8x author: Madani, Azzeddine title: The Psychological Impact of Confinement Linked to the Coronavirus Epidemic COVID-19 in Algeria date: 2020-05-21 words: 5177 flesch: 39 summary: This questionnaire of 29 items is composed of three subscales: social impact, psychological impact, and impact on mobility. The statistical results also show that the Alpha-Cronbach coefficient, in the 10 questions on psychological impacts, is equal to 0.782, which indicates the reliability of the study tool. keywords: a.m.; addition; algeria; april; confinement; containment; coronavirus; coronavirus covid-19; coronavirus epidemic; covid-19; daily; day; effects; epidemic; epidemic covid-19; habits; hand; impact; individual; information; internet; items; life; march; means; measures; pandemic; partial; people; period; population; psychological; psychological impact; questionnaire; reading; respondents; results; sample; social; spread; study; table; time; total cache: cord-324092-ertcvh8x.txt plain text: cord-324092-ertcvh8x.txt item: #36 of 48 id: cord-329476-gotctl5d author: Arnout, Boshra A. title: Predicting psychological service providers' empowerment in the light of the COVID‐19 pandemic outbreak: A structural equation modelling analysis date: 2020-06-14 words: 5401 flesch: 28 summary: Because of the importance of the profession of psychological services in the preparation of members of society psychologically, it is necessary to pay attention to the empowerment of psychological service providers to achieve the quality of psychological services provided to beneficiaries, that is matching the current performance of the psychological service providers with the needs and expectations of psychological service providers at different ages and social and professional levels of society, and accuracy and comprehensiveness. [Colour figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com] empowerment, which requires his or her skilful empowerment, that is gaining and developing their skills in psychological services work on the one hand, as well as empowering them in managing psychological services work with clients and the freedom to choose psychological services methods and techniques, planning the psychological services process and recognising that they have the ability to influence the clients, which improves job satisfaction, encouraging them to respond quickly to guide the needs of clients, solve their problems and work in positive ways, and create a climate of trust between psychological service providers and clients. keywords: ability; analysis; arnout; behaviour; clients; confidence; covid-19; creative; decision; dimensions; duties; effectiveness; empowerment; empowerment scale; environment; factor; figure; health; healthcare; indicators; individual; infection; items; job; level; life; light; measured; members; mental; model; pandemic; performance; personal; problem; process; professional; psychological; psychological empowerment; psychological service; quarantine; responsibilities; results; satisfaction; scale; self; service providers; services; services process; services work; skills; social; stigma; stresses; structural; study; work cache: cord-329476-gotctl5d.txt plain text: cord-329476-gotctl5d.txt item: #37 of 48 id: cord-330831-3b7vfv9b author: Hao, Fengyi title: A quantitative and qualitative study on the neuropsychiatric sequelae of acutely ill COVID-19 inpatients in isolation facilities date: 2020-10-19 words: 8243 flesch: 41 summary: A greater proportion of COVID-19 patients experienced impulsivity (p = 0.016) and insomnia (p = 0.039) than psychiatric patients and healthy controls. COVID-19 patients reported a higher psychological impact of the outbreak than psychiatric patients and healthy controls, with half of them having clinically significant symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder. keywords: acute; anxiety; behavior; china; chinese; controls; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; covid-19 patients; data; days; depression; discrimination; disease; disorders; effects; emotional; emotions; face; factors; fear; feelings; findings; friends; future; general; groups; health; healthcare; help; higher; hospital; immune; impact; impulsivity; infected; infection; inflammatory; insomnia; interviews; isolation; levels; life; limited; markers; measures; medical; mental; mild; moderate; needs; neuropsychiatric; outbreak; pandemic; participants; past; patients; people; physical; population; positive; potential; proportion; psychiatric; psychiatric patients; psychological; ptsd; qualitative; research; respiratory; responses; result; review; risk; score; self; severe; severity; significant; situation; sleep; status; stigma; stress; studies; study; support; symptoms; system; time; total; treatment; variables; virus; workers; worried cache: cord-330831-3b7vfv9b.txt plain text: cord-330831-3b7vfv9b.txt item: #38 of 48 id: cord-331257-z2x1wax0 author: Yao, Yang title: Psychological Status and Influencing Factors of Hospital Medical Staff During the COVID-19 Outbreak date: 2020-08-04 words: 2628 flesch: 51 summary: The major demographic, professional characteristics, and psychological distress scores were shown in Table 2 . More than half of the participants (61.1%) reported psychological distress. keywords: care; characteristics; china; coronavirus; covid-19; distress; epidemic; factors; february; general; hcws; health; hospital; impact; infection; information; item; measures; medical; nurses; outbreak; participants; patients; positive; pressure; psychological; questionnaire; results; risk; sars; score; staff; status; study; work; workers; wuhan cache: cord-331257-z2x1wax0.txt plain text: cord-331257-z2x1wax0.txt item: #39 of 48 id: cord-334532-r5lnjsvl author: Rodriguez, Lindsey M. title: Drinking to Cope with the Pandemic: The Unique Associations of COVID-19-Related Perceived Threat and Psychological Distress to Drinking Behaviors in American Men and Women date: 2020-06-27 words: 4760 flesch: 38 summary: The association between COVID-19 psychological distress and both peak number of drinks and typical number of drinks per occasion were moderated by gender. COVID-19 psychological distress was not differentially linked to drinking frequency and heavy drinking episodes among men and women. keywords: adults; alcohol; associated; average; behavior; children; coronavirus; covid-19; disease; distress; drinking; drinks; effects; et al; frequency; gender; health; heavy; home; hypothesis; increase; indices; individuals; loadings; medication; mental; misuse; month; number; occasion; pandemic; participants; past; pattern; psychological; psychological distress; public; qualtrics; quarantine; research; results; review; risk; self; significant; social; states; stay; stewart; study; substance; survey; term; threat; times; typical; use; week; women cache: cord-334532-r5lnjsvl.txt plain text: cord-334532-r5lnjsvl.txt item: #40 of 48 id: cord-334711-58ygbyiz author: Hernández-Sánchez, Brizeida Raquel title: Psychological Factors that Lessen the Impact of COVID-19 on the Self-Employment Intention of Business Administration and Economics’ Students from Latin America date: 2020-07-22 words: 8580 flesch: 27 summary: The role of gender stereotypes in perceptions of entrepreneurs and intentions to become an entrepreneur Development and cross-cultural application of a specific instrument to measure entrepreneurial intentions Exploratory study of job insecurity and entrepreneurial intention as correlates of counterproductive work behavior Social Foundations of Thought and Action: A Social Cognitive Theory The Impact of Terrorism and Conflicts on Growth in Asia ADB Institute Discussion Paper No. 113; ADBI Institute Self-Employment and conflict in Colombia Danger zone entrepreneurs: The importance of resilience and self-efficacy for entrepreneurial intentions The open society assesses its enemies: Shocks, disasters and terrorist attacks Business vulnerability to earthquakes and other disasters Positive and negative postdisaster psychological adjustment among adult survivors of the Southeast Asian earthquake-tsunami Startups in times of crisis-A rapid response to the COVID-19 pandemic Entrepreneurs in dark ages: Persistence of females entrepreneurs in Afghanistan The empirical exploration of intrinsic motivational processes Motivation, personality, and development within embedded social contexts: An overview of self-determination theory Self-Determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being Exercise, physical activity, and self-determination theory: A systematic review Why the self-employed are happier: Evidence from 25 European countries Differentiating autonomy from individualism and independence: A self-determination theory perspective on internalization of cultural orientations and well-being Entrepreneurial intention among university students in Malaysia: Integrating self-determination theory and the theory of planned behavior The impact of autonomy on the relationship between mentoring and entrepreneurial intentions among youth in Germany, Kenya, and Uganda College students' entrepreneurial intention: Testing an integrated model of SDT and TPB The proactive component of organizational behavior: A measure and correlates Proactive Behavior in Organizations Personal initiative (PI): An active performance concept for work in the 21st century Modeling the antecedents of proactive behavior at work Proactive personality and proactive behaviour: Perspectives on person-situation interactions Self-Efficacy: Toward a unifying theory of behavioral change Proactive personality and entrepreneurial intention: Employment and student level as moderators Bin, P. Creativity, proactive personality, and entrepreneurial intention: The role of entrepreneurial alertness From entrepreneurial intentions to behavior: The role of anticipated regret and proactive personality Firms' proactiveness during the crisis: Evidence from European data Entrepreneurial potential and potential entrepreneurs The proactive personality disposition and entrepreneurial behavior among small company presidents What do proactive people do? The impact of entrepreneurship education: A study of Iranian students' entrepreneurial intentions and opportunity identification Determinants of entrepreneurial intent: A meta-analytic test and integration of competing models A systematic literature review on entrepreneurial intentions: Citation, thematic analyses, and research agenda The relationship of entrepreneurial traits, skill, and motivation to subsequentventure growth Personality aspects of entrepreneurship: A look at five meta-analyses Effects of emotional intelligence on entrepreneurial intention and self-efficacy A downside to the entrepreneurial personality? Psychological need satisfaction as a pre-determinant of entrepreneurial intentionality Basic psychological need satisfaction, need frustration, and need strength across four cultures Basic psychological need theory: Advancements, critical themes, and future directions On psychological growth and vulnerability: Basic psychological need satisfaction and need frustration as a unifying principle Predicting entrepreneurial intentions: Incremental validity of proactive personality and entrepreneurial self-efficacy as a moderator García-Pérez-de-Lema, D. The effects of personal abilities and self-efficacy on entrepreneurial intentions keywords: adverse; america; associated; basic; behavior; business; career; choice; cognitive; coronavirus; countries; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; crisis; current; dangerous; data; development; economic; education; effect; efficacy; employment; entrepreneurial; entrepreneurial intentions; entrepreneurship; environment; example; factors; future; general; global; growth; health; higher; impact; important; individual; influence; intentions; items; job; latin; level; literature; measure; method; model; motivation; need; need satisfaction; negative; new; opportunities; optimism; optimistic; orientation; pandemic; pandemic perception; people; perception; performance; personality; positive; possible; previous; proactiveness; process; psychological; psychological need; relationship; research; results; review; role; sample; satisfaction; scale; self; situations; social; students; studies; study; success; support; theory; traits; uncertain; understanding; university; value; variables; work cache: cord-334711-58ygbyiz.txt plain text: cord-334711-58ygbyiz.txt item: #41 of 48 id: cord-334865-be6q5774 author: Das, Nileswar title: Psychiatrist in post-COVID-19 era – Are we prepared? date: 2020-04-07 words: 716 flesch: 45 summary: Fear and anxiety are common psychological response during disastrous situations like this (Dong and Bouey, 2020) . Well-conducted studies are needed to assess, (i) the magnitude (i.e. spectrum and severity) of various psychological problems -aiding the policymaking process, (ii) the immediate and long term psychological consequences of such life-changing events in various subgroups of the population, and (iii) the response to various therapeutic interventions. keywords: active; authors; countries; covid-19; fear; health; india; mental; need; pandemic; psychiatric; psychiatrists; psychological; table; time; world cache: cord-334865-be6q5774.txt plain text: cord-334865-be6q5774.txt item: #42 of 48 id: cord-344048-lx9krl5v author: Domínguez-Salas, Sara title: Psycho-Emotional Approach to the Psychological Distress Related to the COVID-19 Pandemic in Spain: A Cross-Sectional Observational Study date: 2020-06-28 words: 5387 flesch: 36 summary: Ebola contacts' perceptions in Senegal Knowledge and risk perceptions of the Ebola virus in the United States Immediate Psychological Responses and Associated Factors during the Initial Stage of the 2019 Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Epidemic among the General Population in China Association of self-perceptions of aging, personal and family resources and loneliness with psychological distress during the lock-down period of COVID-19 Generalized anxiety disorder, depressive symptoms and sleep quality during COVID-19 outbreak in China: A web-based cross-sectional survey A Review of Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) Prediction for the spread of COVID-19 in India and effectiveness of preventive measures Lockdown contained the spread of 2019 novel coronavirus disease in Huangshi city, China: Early epidemiological findings Effectiveness of the measures to flatten the epidemic curve of COVID-19. The psychological impact of quarantine and how to reduce it: Rapid review of the evidence Misinformation of COVID-19 on the Internet: Infodemiology Study Top Concerns of Tweeters During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Infoveillance Study Chinese Public's Attention to the COVID-19 Epidemic on Social Media: Observational Descriptive Study The Impact of COVID-19 Epidemic Declaration on Psychological Consequences: A Study on Active Weibo Users Assessment of Health Information About COVID-19 Prevention on the Internet: Infodemiological Study. keywords: anxiety; associated; behaviors; beliefs; concern; coronavirus; covid-19; covid-19 pandemic; crisis; cross; data; degree; disease; distress; epidemic; factors; general; greater; group; hand; health; higher; hours; impact; infected; infection; information; knowledge; level; measures; media; need; outbreak; pandemic; participants; people; perceptions; population; predictive; preventive; preventive measures; previous; psychological; psychological distress; quarantine; questionnaire; questions; results; review; risk; sample; sectional; situation; social; spain; studies; study; support; survey; symptoms; table; transmission; variables; washing cache: cord-344048-lx9krl5v.txt plain text: cord-344048-lx9krl5v.txt item: #43 of 48 id: cord-344797-d2h0ugpa author: O’Donovan, Róisín title: Measuring psychological safety in healthcare teams: developing an observational measure to complement survey methods date: 2020-07-29 words: 6664 flesch: 39 summary: Observational techniques may offer insights into team psychological safety that the team themselves are not fully aware of and that complement findings from survey measures When developing an observation measure for team psychological safety, Hoenderdos keywords: adapted; behaviours; composite; composite measure; context; data; different; dutch; feedback; final; group; healthcare; healthcare professionals; healthcare teams; interventions; irish; issues; items; leader; learning; level; literature; measure; meeting; members; methods; observation; observation measure; observed; order; outcomes; participants; patient; phase; pilot; point; professionals; psychological; psychological safety; questions; relevant; research; response; results; review; safety; scale; section; sessions; silence; study; survey; survey measure; systematic; table; team; team members; teamwork; test; testing; understanding; use; voice; work cache: cord-344797-d2h0ugpa.txt plain text: cord-344797-d2h0ugpa.txt item: #44 of 48 id: cord-346791-f2bjsopv author: Arslan, Gökmen title: Coronavirus Stress, Optimism-Pessimism, Psychological Inflexibility, and Psychological Health: Psychometric Properties of the Coronavirus Stress Measure date: 2020-06-04 words: 5965 flesch: 25 summary: Psychological inflexibility was moderately and positively correlated with MPCs (r range = .37-.52), meaning that having a high score on psychological inflexibility is associated with higher scores on MPCs. Comparing self-compassion, mindfulness, and psychological inflexibility as predictors of psychological health Naming the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and the virus that causes it Using acceptance and commitment therapy to increase self-compassion: a randomized controlled trial Rethinking online mental health services in China during the COVID-19 epidemic Turkish version of Acceptance and Action Questionnaire-II (AAQ-II): A reliability and validity analysis in clinical and non-clinical samples Gratitude and life satisfaction: mediating role of perceived stress Exploring the associations between resilience, dispositional hope, subjective well-being, and psychological health among adults during early stage of COVID-19 Development and initial validation of the coronavirus perceived risk scale and its relationship with mental health Iranian mental health during the COVID-19 epidemic keywords: acceptance; adults; analysis; anxiety; associated; association; carver; commitment; constructs; coronavirus; coronavirus stress; covid-19; csm; depression; development; effects; et al; evidence; factors; fear; fit; hayes; health; high; higher; inflexibility; internal; interventions; items; levels; life; measure; mediation; mental; model; negative; optimism; pandemic; people; pessimism; positive; present; problems; properties; psychological; psychological inflexibility; psychological problems; psychometric; related; relationship; reliability; research; results; role; sample; scale; self; social; somatization; standardized; strategies; stress; structural; studies; study; tanhan; therapy; turkish; validity; values; variables cache: cord-346791-f2bjsopv.txt plain text: cord-346791-f2bjsopv.txt item: #45 of 48 id: cord-348806-yi9vbgwj author: Saladino, Valeria title: The Psychological and Social Impact of Covid-19: New Perspectives of Well-Being date: 2020-10-02 words: 4012 flesch: 31 summary: Online psychological services avoid geographical barriers and are suitable to become a useful integrated tool in addition to traditional psychotherapy (APS, 2020; Perrin et al., 2020). Online psychological services provide several advantages, especially in the current situation of pandemic. keywords: anxiety; associated; care; children; china; communication; coronavirus; covid-19; depression; development; devices; different; disease; disinhibition; effects; emergency; empathy; epidemic; et al; fear; general; health; help; human; impact; italian; medical; mental; new; online; order; outbreak; pandemic; parents; patients; people; period; population; psychological; psychologists; psychotherapists; psychotherapy; quarantine; recent; relationship; risk; services; situation; social; specific; staff; stress; students; study; support; symptoms; technological; telepsychology; time; traumatic; use; workers cache: cord-348806-yi9vbgwj.txt plain text: cord-348806-yi9vbgwj.txt item: #46 of 48 id: cord-351530-crsii3pu author: Zhao, Fuqiang title: Caring for the Caregiver during COVID-19 Outbreak: Does Inclusive Leadership Improve Psychological Safety and Curb Psychological Distress? A Cross-sectional Study date: 2020-07-30 words: 8989 flesch: 37 summary: This inclusive behaviour helps bring about a positive mood among employees and at the workplace in general (Hollander, 2009) which in turn, as a pleasant affective state, reduces the potential of employee psychological distress. Inclusive leadership has an inverse relationship with psychological distress with a strong path-coefficient. keywords: analysis; anxiety; authors; behaviour; bias; birkeland; charismatic; chat; china; common; constructs; control; covid-19; critical; data; demands; dependent; differences; distress; edmondson; effects; emergencies; employees; environment; epidemic; et al; events; experience; factors; gender; group; hair; head; healthcare; help; higher; hospitals; hours; impact; inclusive; inclusive leadership; influence; item; job; leadership; leadership style; level; literature; marker; mechanism; mental; method; model; negative; nurses; nursing; open; organizational; outbreak; outcomes; paper; partial; pls; positive; psychological; psychological distress; psychological safety; public; questionnaire; relationship; reliability; research; researchers; resources; respondents; responses; results; role; run; safety; sample; scale; significant; structural; studies; study; style; subordinates; support; theory; time; traumatic; values; variable; variance; work; workers; working; workplace; wuhan; years cache: cord-351530-crsii3pu.txt plain text: cord-351530-crsii3pu.txt item: #47 of 48 id: cord-352468-hi7u4w3q author: Xu, Xinglong title: Reconstructing family doctors’ psychological well-being and motivation for effective performance in China: the intervening role of psychological capital date: 2020-07-10 words: 6247 flesch: 36 summary: These and many other hindrances have taken away a strong sense of the mutually beneficial long-term therapeutic relationship between family doctors and patients which is the central psychological factor for doctors' willingness to accept family doctor jobs. key: cord-352468-hi7u4w3q authors: Xu, Xinglong; Zhou, Lulin; Asante-Antwi, Henry; Boafo-Arthur, Ama; Mustafa, Tehzeeb title: Reconstructing family doctors’ psychological well-being and motivation for effective performance in China: the intervening role of psychological capital date: 2020-07-10 journal: BMC Fam Pract DOI: 10.1186/s12875-020-01182-1 sha: doc_id: 352468 cord_uid: hi7u4w3q BACKGROUND: Family practice and family doctors are critical part of China’s primary healthcare delivery in a constantly evolving society. keywords: adj; analysis; case; challenges; china; coefficient; confirmatory; constructs; data; determination; doctors; effect; emotional; emotions; employees; engagement; environment; equation; error; experience; factor; family; family doctors; happiness; health; healthcare; higher; hope; human; impact; influence; involvement; items; job; job involvement; latent; level; matrix; measurement; medical; mental; model; motivation; nurses; organization; patients; performance; performance sustenance; positive; practice; primary; psychological; psychological capital; psychological wellbeing; public; questionnaire; regression; relationship; research; response; results; role; satisfaction; scale; self; service; shows; significant; standard; structural; studies; study; sustenance; system; theory; validity; variables; wellbeing; work cache: cord-352468-hi7u4w3q.txt plain text: cord-352468-hi7u4w3q.txt item: #48 of 48 id: cord-356132-1nisyl5r author: Wang, Huiyao title: The psychological distress and coping styles in the early stages of the 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19) epidemic in the general mainland Chinese population: A web-based survey date: 2020-05-14 words: 3023 flesch: 37 summary: The population with younger age (F = 102.04), unmarried (t = 15.28), with history of visiting Wuhan in the past month (t = -40.86), with history of epidemics occurring in the community (t = -10.25), more concern with media reports (F = 21.84), perceived more impacts of the epidemic outbreak (changes over living situations, F = 331.71; emotional control, F = 1863.07; epidemic-related dreams, F = 1642.78) and negative coping style (t = 37.41) had higher level of psychological distress. The general mainland Chinese population with unmarried, history of visiting Wuhan in the past month, perceived more impacts of the epidemic and negative coping style had higher level of psychological distress in the early stages of COVID-19 epidemic. keywords: analysis; changes; china; concern; control; coronavirus; covid-19; distress; dreams; early; emotional; epidemic; factors; general; general population; health; higher; history; impacts; influence; level; mental; negative; outbreak; participants; population; psychological; psychological distress; questionnaire; stages; study; style; survey; traumatic; unmarried; wuhan cache: cord-356132-1nisyl5r.txt plain text: cord-356132-1nisyl5r.txt