| Literature DB >> 33583984 |
Irene Camerlink1, Birte L Nielsen2,3, Ines Windschnurer4, Belinda Vigors5.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in many changes in the way research is conducted. Some specific groups (e.g. women) and activities (e.g. teaching) may have been disproportionally affected. Our aim was to assess the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on animal behaviour and welfare researchers' work experience and productivity, focussing on gender, care role, career stage and teaching load. An online survey asked researchers about childcare, research and teaching load and associated changes due to the pandemic, among others, and included the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) and the Inventory of Socially Supportive Behaviours (ISSB). From June-July 2020, 117 completed responses were received from 28 countries. Time available for writing papers and grants either increased (36%), decreased (31%) or these tasks were halted completely (12%). Perceived productivity was significantly lower for caregivers (P < 0.001) and for men as compared to women (P < 0.001); and low productivity was associated with more stress (higher PSS: P < 0.001). Respondents' experience of the pandemic related to the PSS (b = -0.03 ± 0.02; P = 0.03) and to self-assessed personality traits (P = 0.01). The average PSS of 21 ± 6.5 was greater than the reference value of 15, and was higher when respondents had low job security (P < 0.001) and when they more strongly characterised themselves as perfectionists, hard-working, empathetic and worried (P = 0.02). Respondents who had an intense care role received most social support (P = 0.04). Teaching load increased for 25% of the respondents but did not significantly relate to any of the response variables. Overall, caregivers and early career researchers faced the most difficulties, and personality traits had a major impact on the ability to cope with the changes caused by the pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: Gender equality; care role; corona virus; pandemic; psychological stress; research output
Year: 2021 PMID: 33583984 PMCID: PMC7871892 DOI: 10.1016/j.applanim.2021.105255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Anim Behav Sci ISSN: 0168-1591 Impact factor: 2.448
Qualitative thematic analysis of participants’ experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown.
| Themes and sub-themes | Codes | Illustrative quote |
|---|---|---|
| Quality time with friends/family | “ | |
| More time for activities / hobbies | “ | |
| Opportunity to write | ||
| Opportunity to develop skills | ||
| Opportunities from moving online | ||
| Working from home | ||
| Physical health benefits | ||
| Personal life | Lack of routine | |
| Travel restrictions | ||
| Physical health | At desk all day | |
| Lack of exercise | ||
| Stress | ||
| Uncertainty | ||
| Anxiety / Worry | ||
| Guilt | ||
| Loneliness / isolation | ||
| Fatigue / exhaustion | ||
| Overwhelm | “Lack of childcare and need to do home schooling has meant I have been meeting myself coming backwards and feeling exhausted and overwhelmed with all the different aspects of life until my children returned to school” | |
| Home and family-life | Interpersonal conflict | |
| Impact on productivity | ||
| Impact on career | ||
| Home-schooling | ||
| Work-life and career | Impact on planned research | |
| Reduced productivity, motivation, focus | ||
| Employment uncertainty | ||
| Increased demands | ||
| Challenges of home working | ||
| Concern for students | ||
| Impact on industry relationships |
Job profile of the respondents (n = 117) in percentage and number of respondents according to type of research institution, research field and career stage, separately. The column for institution exceeds 100 % as some respondents had functions in multiple institutions.
| Institution | % (n) | Research field | % (n) | Career stage | % (n) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University | 77.8 (91) | Animal welfare | 71.6 (83) | PhD student | 31.9 (37) |
| Research institute | 15.4 (18) | Animal behaviour | 25.0 (29) | ECR | 35.3 (41) |
| Research college | 7.7. (9) | Animal production | 1.7 (2) | Established | 15.5 (18) |
| NGO | 6.8 (8) | Veterinary research | 1.7 (2) | Senior | 17.2 (20) |
| Government | 6.8 (8) | ||||
| Independent | 2.6 (3) |
‘Established researcher’ includes independent researchers, lecturers and assistant professors.
‘Senior researcher’ includes associate researchers and (university and full) professors.
Heat map of the Likert scales on questions related to personality and life satisfaction, showing the percentage of respondents (out of n = 117) indicating their answer to a 7-point* Likert scale. The darker the colour the higher the percentage of respondents.
Likert scale: 1: completely disagree; 2: disagree; 3: somewhat disagree: 4: neither agree nor disagree; 5: somewhat agree; 6: agree; and 7: completely agree.
Fig. 1a) The distribution of the average number of working hours per week prior to the pandemic; and b) the change in working hours during the pandemic.
Heat map of the Likert scales on questions related to work during the pandemic. The table shows the percentage of respondents indicating their answer to an 8-point Likert scale*. The darker the colour the higher the percentage of respondents.
Likert scale: n/a: not applicable; 1: completely disagree; 2: disagree; 3: somewhat disagree: 4: neither agree nor disagree; 5: somewhat agree; 6: agree; and 7: completely agree.
Fig. 2The effects of a) care role, b) career stage, c) gender, and d) type of work institution on the perceived work productivity during the pandemic. The axes across the panels are set to the same scale. *indicates a significant difference between the categories.