COVID 后越南图书馆员的心理健康

Linh Ngoc Le, Tri Nguyen Thi Kim, Vuong Nguyen Hoang Vinh, T. Huynh, Mai Huynh Nguyen, H. Doan, Nhung Tran Thi Ngoc, Lap Cong Lu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究旨在衡量 COVID-19 大流行后新常态下越南图书馆员的心理健康水平。由于大流行病使应对危机成为全球公认的生活中不可或缺的一部分,因此研究结果有望为越南图书馆和信息中心工作人员未来的心理保健政策干预提供建议。在此基础上,我们设计并实施了一项在线调查,让越南各地的图书馆员使用世界卫生组织 5 项标准[1]、修订版生活取向测试(LOT-R)[2]和斯特拉汉-格尔巴西 1972 年简版马洛-克劳恩社会满意度量表[3],对其心理总体健康的 5 个维度进行自我评分。约有三分之二的受访图书馆员感染了 COVID-19。无论是 COVID 后的心理健康还是 COVID 中期的心理健康,感染者与未感染者的得分在统计学上都有显著差异。对性别、婚姻状况和父母身份进行的三项独立样本检验仅发现,不同婚姻状况和父母身份的人在中期和后期 COVIDmental 健康评分上存在显著统计学差异,未婚和无子女的人在中期和后期 COVIDmental 健康评分上均高于同龄人。对各种人口统计数据(地理区域、图书馆类型、图书馆规模、年龄、资历、职位、专业和资历)进行的八次单向组间方差分析仅表明,不同年龄组、资历水平和职位类型之间的中期和后期 COVIDmental 健康得分存在显著的统计学差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Post-COVIDmental health of librarians in Vietnam
This study aims to measure the mental well-being levels of librarians in Vietnamin the new normal context after the COVID-19 pandemic. The findings are expected to advocate for future policy interventions regarding mental health carefor staffin Vietnam’s librariesand information centerssince the pandemic has made coping with crises recognised globally as an integral part of life. On this ground, a survey was designed and administered online for librarians across Vietnam to self-rate their 5 dimensions of psychological generalwell-being using the WHO-5 [1]together with the Revised Life Orientation Test (LOT-R) [2],and Strahan-Gerbasi’s 1972 short version of the Marlow‐Crowne Social Desirability Scale [3].The survey shows despite the low mid-COVID mental health, there was a statisticallysignificant increase in mental health scores in the new normal. There are abouttwo-thirds of the surveyed librarians areinfected with COVID-19. For either the mid-or post-COVIDmental health, there was a statistically significant difference in scores between the infected and uninfected ones. Threeindependent-samplet-tests on genders, marital and parenthood statuses only found statistically significant differences in mid-and post-COVIDmental health scores between different marital and parenthood statuses, with the unmarried and the ones with no children scoring higher on both mid-and post-COVIDmental health over their counterparts. Eight one-way between-groups ANOVA tests conducted on a wide range of demographics (geographical area, library type, library size, age, seniority, position, specialization, and qualification) only showed statistically significant differences in mid- 2and post-COVIDmental health scores between different age groups, seniority levels, and types of position.
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