| Literature DB >> 35898432 |
Xin-Ying Cai1, Shao-Yan Zheng2, Zhen-Su Lin2, Su-Zhi Chen2, Wei-Yi Zhu2, Jia-Jia Huang2, Ze-Li Zheng2, Yu-Hua Zhou2.
Abstract
Background: Medical workers have been increasingly involved in emergent public health events, which can lead to severe stress. However, no standardized, officially recognized, unified tool exists for mental distress measurement in medical workers who experienced the public health events. Purpose: In the present study, we propose the Global Health Events-Mental Stress Scale (GHE-MSS), as a revised version of the Impact of Event Scale-Revision (IES-R), for assessment of medical workers' acute mental stress responses within one month and their chronic mental stress responses within six months after major health events. Patients and methods: The IES-R was slightly modified, developed, and its reliability and validity were tested using the Delphi survey, primary survey with 115 participants, formal survey with 300 participants, and clinical evaluation with 566 participants.Entities:
Keywords: IES-R; global health events; medical workers; mental disorders; mental stress responses; mental stress scale
Year: 2022 PMID: 35898432 PMCID: PMC9309288 DOI: 10.2147/PRBM.S369958
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Res Behav Manag ISSN: 1179-1578
Figure 1Flow chart of the study process.
Experts’ Demographic Characteristics
| Characteristics | Frequency (N) | Proportion (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 30–40 | 5 | 50 |
| 40–50 | 2 | 20 |
| ≥50 | 3 | 30 |
| College | 2 | 20 |
| Undergraduate | 6 | 60 |
| Master’s and doctorate | 2 | 20 |
| Junior professional title | 3 | 30 |
| Senior professional title | 3 | 30 |
| Associate senior professional title | 4 | 40 |
| 11–15 | 6 | 60 |
| 15–20 | 1 | 10 |
| ≥20 | 3 | 30 |
| Psychotherapy education or research | 1 | 10 |
| Clinical psychotherapy | 7 | 70 |
| Psychological care | 2 | 20 |
Recovery of the Questionnaire and Suggestions Offered by Delphi Consultation
| First Round | Second Round | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of questionnaires distributed | 10 | 10 |
| Number of questionnaires collected | 10 | 10 |
| Number of experts who expressed their opinions | 3 | 1 |
| Effective questionnaires | 10 | 10 |
| Recovery rate (%) | 100 | 100 |
| Authority coefficient | 0.76 | 0.76 |
| Mean (coefficient of variation) | 4.73 (0.11) | 4.85 (0.08) |
| Kendall coefficient | 0.47 | 0.74 |
| P-value | 0.00** | 0.00** |
Notes: **Significant difference compared between-groups (p < 0.01).
Medical Workers’ Demographic Characteristics in the Three Main Stages of the Survey
| Characteristics | Primary Survey (N = 115) | Formal Survey (N = 300) | Clinical Evaluation (N = 566) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 28 | 24.35% | 51 | 17.00% | 103 | 18.20% |
| Female | 87 | 75.65% | 249 | 83.00% | 463 | 81.80% |
| Identity | ||||||
| Doctor | 16 | 13.91% | 36 | 12.00% | 70 | 12.37% |
| Nurse | 99 | 86.09% | 264 | 88.00% | 496 | 87.63% |
| Junior | 84 | 73.04% | 206 | 68.67% | 417 | 73.67% |
| Intermediate | 20 | 17.39% | 74 | 24.67% | 118 | 20.85% |
| Senior | 11 | 9.57% | 20 | 6.67% | 31 | 5.48% |
| Emergency department | 12 | 10.43% | 52 | 17.33% | 158 | 27.92% |
| Fever clinic | 9 | 7.83% | 27 | 9.00% | 27 | 4.77% |
| Respiratory department | 14 | 12.17% | 76 | 25.33% | 106 | 18.73% |
| Infections department | 23 | 20.00% | 50 | 16.67% | 91 | 16.08% |
| ICU | 41 | 35.65% | 64 | 21.33% | 82 | 14.49% |
| Clinical laboratory | 8 | 6.96% | 17 | 5.67% | 17 | 3.00% |
| Others | 8 | 6.96% | 14 | 4.67% | 85 | 15.02% |
Abbreviation: ICU, Intensive Care Unit.
Reliability, Validity, and Relevance Analyzed by Clinical Evaluation of GHE-MSS
| Clinical Evaluation of GHE-MSS (N = 566) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cronbach’s Alpha Coefficient | Spearman-Brown Coefficient | Cronbach’s Alpha Coefficient (Test-Retest, N = 161) | Pearson’s Correlation Coefficient | |
| 0.95 | 0.94 | 0.99 | 0.81–0.90** | |
| 0.91 | 0.86 | 0.95 | 0.76–0.83** | |
| 0.89 | 0.88 | 0.98 | 0.78–0.84** | |
Notes: **Significant difference compared between-groups (p < 0.01).
Abbreviations: GHE- MSS, Global Health Events-Mental Stress Scale; INT, intrusion; HYP, hyperarousal; AVD, avoidance.
Figure 2Correlations between GHE-MSS and PCL-C.
Factor Loadings of the Scale Items (Pattern Matrix)
| Item | HYP | AVD | INT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | I avoided letting myself get upset when I thought about the treatment experience or was reminded of it. | 0.77 | ||
| 7 | I felt as if the treatment experience had not happened or was not real. | 0.79 | ||
| 8 | I stayed away from reminders of the treatment experience. | 0.76 | ||
| 11 | I tried not to think about the treatment experience. | 0.75 | ||
| 12 | I was aware that I still had a lot of feelings about the treatment experience, but I did not deal with them. | 0.75 | ||
| 13 | My feelings about the treatment experience were kind of numb. | 0.78 | ||
| 17 | I tried to remove the treatment experience from my memory. | 0.74 | ||
| 22 | I tried not to talk about the treatment experience. | 0.74 | ||
| 4 | After providing treatment, I felt irritable and angry. | 0.73 | ||
| 10 | After providing treatment, I was jumpy and easily startled. | 0.78 | ||
| 15 | After providing treatment, I had trouble falling asleep. | 0.74 | ||
| 18 | After providing treatment, I had trouble concentrating. | 0.80 | ||
| 19 | Reminders of the treatment experience caused me to have physical reactions, such as sweating, trouble breathing, nausea, or a pounding heart. | 0.77 | ||
| 21 | After providing treatment, I felt watchful and on-guard. | 0.79 | ||
| 1 | Any reminder brought back feelings about the treatment experience. | 0.86 | ||
| 2 | After providing treatment, I had trouble staying asleep. | 0.84 | ||
| 3 | Other things kept making me think about the treatment experience. | 0.85 | ||
| 6 | I thought about the treatment experience when I did not mean to. | 0.89 | ||
| 9 | Pictures about the treatment experience popped into my mind | 0.87 | ||
| 14 | I found myself acting or feeling like I was back at the treatment time. | 0.84 | ||
| 16 | I had waves of strong feelings about the treatment experience. | 0.79 | ||
| 20 | I had dreams about the treatment experience. | 0.84 | ||
| % explained variance | 24.11 | 23.54 | 21.17 | |
Abbreviations: INT, intrusion; HYP, hyperarousal; AVD, avoidance.
Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Oblique Bi-Factorial Model
| X2 | df | P | X2/df | CFI | GFI | SRMR | RMSEA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model | 729.016 | 206 | 0.000** | 3.539 | 0.947 | 0.886 | 0.038 | 0.067 |
Notes: **Significant difference compared between-groups (p < 0.01).
Abbreviations: X2/df, Chi-square test of model fit; CFI, comparative fit index; GFI, goodness-of-fit index; SRMR, standardized root mean square residual; RMSEA, root mean square error of approximation.
Figure 3Estimation of the incidence of PTSD using the GHE-MSS in the stages of scale testing and clinical evaluation.
Figure 4The rate of PTSD symptoms assessed by GHE-MSS and PCL-C in the stage of clinical evaluation.