Stress buffering after physical activity engagement: An experience sampling study

IF 3.5 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL British Journal of Health Psychology Pub Date : 2023-04-10 DOI:10.1111/bjhp.12659
Leo Gerstberger, Elisabeth S. Blanke, Jan Keller, Annette Brose
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Abstract

Objectives

While encountering daily hassles is a normative experience, it poses a threat to individuals' daily affective well-being. However, physical activity engagement may help to reduce the current stress-related impact on affective well-being (i.e. stress buffering), which we investigate in this study. Furthermore, we examined the possible moderating role of people's global stress context (i.e. exposure to major life events and chronic stress) on this within-person stress-buffering effect.

Design

We approached these ideas using six-times-a-day experience sampling assessments over a period of 22 days.

Methods

Drawing on a broad national sample of 156 middle-aged adults from the EE-SOEP-IS study, we aimed to elucidate the naturally occurring within-person dynamics of current stress, physical activity engagement, and momentary affect within individuals' everyday lives. Major life events and chronic stress were measured as between-person variables.

Results

Multilevel analyses revealed significant within-person associations of current stress and physical activity engagement with momentary affect. Stress-related negative affect was lower when individuals engaged in physical activity, in accordance with the idea of a within-person stress-buffering effect of physical activity engagement. For individuals exposed to more severe major life events, the stress-buffering effect of physical activity engagement for negative affect was lower. Chronic stress did not moderate the within-person stress-buffering effect.

Conclusions

Overall, results add to the existing literature that links physical activity to increased stress resilience and emphasizes the need for taking the global between-person stress context into account.

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体育活动参与后的压力缓冲:经验抽样研究
虽然遇到日常的麻烦是一种规范的体验,但它对个人的日常情感幸福构成了威胁。然而,参与体育活动可能有助于减少当前压力对情感幸福感的影响(即压力缓冲),我们在本研究中对此进行了调查。此外,我们研究了人们的全球压力背景(即暴露于重大生活事件和慢性压力)对这种个人压力缓冲效应的可能调节作用。我们在22天的时间里使用每天6次的体验抽样评估来接近这些想法。方法从ee - sop - is研究中抽取全国范围内的156名中年人作为样本,我们旨在阐明个人日常生活中自然发生的当前压力、身体活动参与和瞬间影响的个人动态。主要生活事件和慢性压力被测量为人与人之间的变量。结果多水平分析显示,当前压力和身体活动参与与瞬间影响之间存在显著的内在关联。当个体参与体育活动时,与压力相关的负面影响较低,这与体育活动参与的个人内部压力缓冲效应的观点相一致。对于经历过更严重的重大生活事件的个体,体育活动参与对负面影响的压力缓冲作用更低。慢性应激对人体内应激缓冲作用没有调节作用。总的来说,研究结果增加了现有文献中体力活动与增加压力恢复力之间的联系,并强调了将全球人际压力环境考虑在内的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
British Journal of Health Psychology
British Journal of Health Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL-
CiteScore
14.10
自引率
1.30%
发文量
58
期刊介绍: The focus of the British Journal of Health Psychology is to publish original research on various aspects of psychology that are related to health, health-related behavior, and illness throughout a person's life. The journal specifically seeks articles that are based on health psychology theory or discuss theoretical matters within the field.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Determinants of child body weight categorization in parents and health care professionals: An experimental study. Personalized interventions for behaviour change: A scoping review of just-in-time adaptive interventions. Online support groups for family caregivers: A qualitative exploration of social support and engagement. Self-compassion and psychological distress in chronic illness: A meta-analysis.
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