揭示情绪动荡:Covid-19如何影响研究人员和学术界对情绪健康的追求。

Crista Weise, Nuria Sole-Suner, Mariona Corcelles, Anna Sala-Bubare, Montserrat Castello
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引用次数: 0

摘要

新冠肺炎危机前所未有地要求研究人员适应工作和个人生活的重大变化。我们的研究旨在填补这一空白,分析Covid-19对研究人员活动的情绪影响和限制潜在干扰(特别是与工作条件、照顾责任、健康、平衡和社会支持有关的干扰),考虑年龄、性别和工作职位的调节作用。在新冠肺炎大流行的第一次封锁期间,进行了在线调查,收集了1301名从事科学(28.1%)、社会科学(25.9%)、人文科学(16.2%)、卫生(16.2%)和工程与建筑(13.5%)工作的研究人员(ECR %,高级研究人员%)的回答。该研究强调,Covid-19大流行期间最初的封锁对研究人员产生了重大的情绪影响,加剧了这一群体中已有的情绪困扰和倦怠。年龄、健康状况、性别以及平衡工作和家庭生活的困难等因素与倦怠和情绪困扰的风险增加有关。缺乏社会支持被认为是一个重要的风险因素,而优先考虑生产力而不是幸福感的学术文化也促成了这一问题。这些发现强调了学术界需要更多的支持和文化变革,以保护研究人员的心理健康,并防止年轻学者的心理健康问题的记录。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Unveiling the Emotional Turmoil: How Covid-19 impacted researchers and the pursuit of emotional well-being in academia.
The Covid-19 crisis unprecedentedly required researchers to adapt to significant changes in their work and personal lives. Our study aims to fill this gap analysing the Covid-19 emotional impact and confinement potential disruptions on researchers activity (specifically, those related to working conditions, caring responsibilities, health, balance, and social support) considering the modulating role played by age, gender, and job position. An online survey was distributed during the first lockdown period of the Covid-19 pandemic, and answers from 1301 researchers (ECR %, senior researchers %) working in Sciences (28.1%), Social Sciences (25.9%), Humanities (16.2%), Health (16.2%) and in Engineering and Architecture (13.5%) were collected. The study highlights that the initial lockdown during the Covid-19 pandemic had a significant emotional impact on researchers, exacerbating pre-existing emotional distress and burnout within this group. Factors such as age, health, gender, and difficulties in balancing work and family life were associated with an increased risk of burnout and emotional distress. Lack of social support was identified as a significant risk factor, while the academic culture prioritizing productivity over well-being contributed to the issue. These findings underscore the need for greater support and cultural changes in academia to preserve researchers' mental health and prevent the chronicization of mental health issues in young academics.
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