COVID-19 大流行开始时的健康行为:主观社会地位通过心理困扰产生间接影响的证据。

IF 2.5 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Journal of Health Psychology Pub Date : 2024-09-28 DOI:10.1177/13591053241284075
Jacqueline Rodriguez-Stanley, Tim Bogg, Yanping Jiang, Samuele Zilioli
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引用次数: 0

摘要

主观社会地位(SSS)是一个人与社会中其他人相比所处社会地位的感知,它与社会经济地位(SES)是相互关联但又截然不同的健康决定因素。苦恼和健康行为等中间因素也会促成这种关系。这项预先登记的研究假设,在 COVID-19 大流行的最初几个月,非特异性心理困扰将间接地把 SSS 和 SES 与睡眠质量、体育活动和饮酒这三种健康行为的感知变化联系起来。2020 年 4 月至 6 月期间,我们通过在线横断面调查收集了 412 名美国成年人的数据。调查结果表明,自大流行病爆发以来,较低的 SSS 与较低的当前睡眠质量、睡眠质量恶化和体力活动减少间接相关,因为心理压力更大。路径分析控制了年龄、性别、种族、COVID-19 相关担忧和就地避难状态。研究结果将根据 COVID-19 的研究结果和有关社会经济地位健康差异的更广泛文献进行讨论。
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Health behaviors at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence for indirect effects of subjective social status via psychological distress.

Subjective social status (SSS), the perception of one's social standing compared to others in society, and socioeconomic status (SES) are interconnected but distinct determinants of health. Intermediary factors such as distress and health behaviors can contribute to this relationship. This pre-registered study hypothesized that, in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, nonspecific psychological distress would indirectly link SSS and SES to perceived changes in three health behaviors: sleep quality, physical activity, and alcohol consumption. Data from 412 US adults were collected from April to June 2020 through an online cross-sectional survey. Findings indicated that lower SSS was indirectly associated with lower current sleep quality, worsened sleep quality, and decreased physical activity since the pandemic onset via greater psychological distress. Path analyses controlled for age, gender, race, COVID-19-related worry, and shelter-in-place status. Results are discussed in light of findings from COVID-19 research and the broader literature on SES health disparities.

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来源期刊
Journal of Health Psychology
Journal of Health Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL-
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
3.10%
发文量
81
期刊介绍: ournal of Health Psychology is an international peer-reviewed journal that aims to support and help shape research in health psychology from around the world. It provides a platform for traditional empirical analyses as well as more qualitative and/or critically oriented approaches. It also addresses the social contexts in which psychological and health processes are embedded. Studies published in this journal are required to obtain ethical approval from an Institutional Review Board. Such approval must include informed, signed consent by all research participants. Any manuscript not containing an explicit statement concerning ethical approval and informed consent will not be considered.
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