Impact of childhood socioeconomic status on depression among postdoctoral researchers in universities: The chain mediating role of current subjective socioeconomic status and perceived stress.
Muli Hu, Qing Lu, Xinyu Chen, Yi Zhang, Xiangyun Liu, Na Yao, Huiyuan Zhong
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: Postdoctoral researchers in Chinese universities commonly face a high risk of mental health issues, such as depression, yet the underlying causes and mechanisms remain unclear. This study aims to explore the influence of childhood socioeconomic status (SES) on depression among postdoctoral researchers and the mediating roles of current subjective SES and perceived stress in this process.
Methods: An online survey was conducted among postdoctoral researchers at a university. The survey included a general information questionnaire, the Childhood Socioeconomic Status Scale, the Subjective Socioeconomic Status Scale, the Perceived Stress Scale, and the Patient Health Questionnaire. A total of 505 valid responses were collected. Pearson correlation analysis was used to analyze the data, and the PROCESS macro was employed for chain mediation analysis.
Results: Childhood SES was significantly positively correlated with current subjective SES (P<0.05) and significantly negatively correlated with postdoctoral tenure, perceived stress, and depression (all P<0.05). Current subjective SES was significantly negatively correlated with perceived stress and depression (both P<0.05), while perceived stress was significantly positively correlated with depression (P<0.05). The chain mediation effect of childhood SES → current subjective SES → perceived stress → depression was significant (P<0.05).
Conclusions: Childhood socioeconomic status can influence depression among postdoctoral researchers through the mediating roles of current subjective socioeconomic status and perceived stress. These findings provide a target for the prevention and intervention of depression in postdoctoral populations and offer a reference for the development of mental health promotion strategies for young university faculty.
目的:中国高校的博士后研究人员普遍面临抑郁等心理健康问题的高风险,但其背后的原因和机制仍不清楚。本研究旨在探讨童年社会经济地位(SES)对博士后研究人员抑郁的影响,以及当前主观社会经济地位和感知压力在这一过程中的中介作用:方法:对某大学的博士后研究人员进行了一项在线调查。调查内容包括一般信息问卷、儿童社会经济地位量表、主观社会经济地位量表、感知压力量表和患者健康问卷。共收集到 505 份有效答卷。采用皮尔逊相关分析法对数据进行分析,并使用 PROCESS 宏进行链式中介分析:结果:童年的社会经济地位与当前的主观社会经济地位(PPPPP)呈显著正相关:童年社会经济地位可通过当前主观社会经济地位和感知压力的中介作用影响博士后研究人员的抑郁。这些发现为预防和干预博士后人群的抑郁症提供了目标,也为制定促进大学青年教师心理健康的策略提供了参考。
期刊介绍:
Journal of Central South University (Medical Sciences), founded in 1958, is a comprehensive academic journal of medicine and health sponsored by the Ministry of Education and Central South University. The journal has been included in many important databases and authoritative abstract journals at home and abroad, such as the American Medline, Pubmed and its Index Medicus (IM), the Netherlands Medical Abstracts (EM), the American Chemical Abstracts (CA), the WHO Western Pacific Region Medical Index (WPRIM), and the Chinese Science Citation Database (Core Database) (CSCD); it is a statistical source journal of Chinese scientific and technological papers, a Chinese core journal, and a "double-effect" journal of the Chinese Journal Matrix; it is the "2nd, 3rd, and 4th China University Excellent Science and Technology Journal", "2008 China Excellent Science and Technology Journal", "RCCSE China Authoritative Academic Journal (A+)" and Hunan Province's "Top Ten Science and Technology Journals". The purpose of the journal is to reflect the new achievements, new technologies, and new experiences in medical research, medical treatment, and teaching, report new medical trends at home and abroad, promote academic exchanges, improve academic standards, and promote scientific and technological progress.