Positive state of mind may be antidote for working in pandemic—study
According to a new West Virginia University study, self-efficacy, optimism, hope and resiliency help inoculate employees from the negative effects of working through a pandemic.
The findings of the study were published in the International Journal of Workplace Health Management.
Jeffery Houghton, a management professor, had studied how college students coped with stress through adaptive (i.e. exercise, meditation, social networking) and maladaptive (i.e. binge drinking, substance abuse, negative thoughts) behaviors before the world was dramatically altered by COVID-19 in early 2020.
It dawned on him to shift that focus to people working amid the pandemic. How were people handling working under the same roof they ate and slept—with some of them also homeschooling and rearing children?
He teamed up with two of his PhD students, Richard Oxarart and Luke Langlinais, and Salisbury University researchers to see how “psychological capital”—or PsyCap, a positive state of mind characterized by self-efficacy, optimism, hope and resiliency in the world of psychology—influenced employees.
The findings aren’t a total surprise: Those lagging in PsyCap characteristics drifted to maladaptive behaviors and exhibited a high perception of stress.
“If you’re adaptively coping, you’re going to have less stress. If you have a lower PsyCap, you’re likely going to engage in maladaptive coping, which leads to even greater stress,” Houghton said.
“We wanted to see how these dynamics change if you’re working from home. We felt that working at home would increase the effects of maladaptive coping on stress,” Houghton added.
And it did, based on their study.
Workers relying on adaptive coping strategies fared better, though Houghton anticipated their levels of stress would have been much lower.
“You’ve still got a strong, positive relationship between PsyCap and adaptive coping,” Houghton said. “But for the people working at home, that doesn’t seem to affect their stress. That’s interesting and maybe because of additional stressors at home. At the end of the day, PsyCap tends to work more by reducing maladaptive coping instead of increasing the adaptive coping.”
Houghton and his team surveyed 378 full-time employees during the first week of May 2020, when many individuals still worked remotely. The average age of participants was 35 and 52 per cent of those surveyed were female.
A poll by the American Psychological Association released around that same timeframe found that 70 per cent of employed adults said work was a significant source of stress in their lives, a substantially higher percentage than reported in prior APA surveys.
Regardless of where you work, Houghton’s team found that many people view work as one of life’s stressors. One possible way to change that is through PsyCap training, Houghton said.
The four components—self-efficacy, optimism, hope and resiliency —can be viewed together as a singular entity, he added. “Do they really hang together as a single concept? The research suggests that if you look at them as a package, you’ll get better outcomes,” Houghton said.
“A compelling concept from a practical standpoint is that unlike something like your personality, which is relatively stable—you can’t change your personality that easily, PsyCap is something that’s considered to be malleable. It can change and be improved,” Houghton added.
Houghton said PsyCap is a relatively new concept but recommends organizations to consider offering training to keep workers happy and healthy.
“Workshops to help people improve their level of this cognitive resource can in fact make them more adaptive with their coping styles,” Houghton concluded. (ANI)