13 research outputs found

    Validation of the Teacher Stress Inventory (TSI) in a multicultural context: The SABPA study

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    The aim of this study was to validate the Teacher Stress Inventory (TSI) for use in a South African context. The process of scale validation also sheds significant light on this culturally diverse group of participants’ levels of psychological well-being and physical health, and its association with the level of stress that teachers reported. Using a cross-sectional survey design, Caucasian (n = 209) and African (n = 200) educators’ subsiding in the North-West Province of South Africa, completed the TSI, together with a number of self-report and physiological measures of stress and well-being. In contrast to the five factors of the TSI identified in US samples, statistical analysis yielded a two-factor model (i.e. General circumstance-related stress and Learner-related stress) with satisfactory reliability indices. Significant correlation with measures of psychological and physiological health also reflected positively on the criterion-related validity of the scale. The TSI proved to be a useful, brief self-report questionnaire for the assessment of teacher stress in this cohort of South African teachers.Keywords: psychological well-being; reliability; South African context; stress; Teacher Stress Inventory (TSI); validit

    Occupational stress and mental well-being in a cohort of black South African teachers

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    This study explored levels of occupational stress and mental well-being of a cohort of Black South African teachers. 200 secondary school teachers completed the Teacher Stress Inventory (TSI: Boyle, Borg, Falzon, & Baglion, 1995), General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-28: Goldberg & Hillier, 1979) and Mental Health Continuum-Short Form (MHC-SF: Keyes, 2006). Correlations and Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) were used to determine the levels of occupational stress and well-being of participants, and to establish the relation between these variables. A significant majority of the teachers reported high levels of mental health (flourishing) despite high levels of teacher stress. These results show teachers’ ability to withstand and cope with stress whilst maintaining their mental health. This suggests the presence of protective factors that mediate the effect of work-related stressors and, in so doing, contribute to the teachers’ levels of resilience

    Gender comparisons of sport psychological skills profile of adolescent sport participants

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    The primary aim of this study was to explore gender differences regarding the sport psychological skills (SPS) profile of adolescent sport participants in a South African context. The present study forms part of an extensive five-year longitudinal study, the Physical Activity and Health Longitudinal Study (PAHL-Study). A crosssectional research design was used to gather quantitative data. Two hundred and eleven (89 boys and 122 girls) grade nine pupils (14 and 15 years of age) participated in the study. The participants completed the Athletic Coping Skills Inventory for Sport (ACSI-28) to determine their SPS profile. The results showed that the boys obtained higher mean scores in seven of the eight measured sport psychological skills. Freedom from worry was the only skill that yielded a statistically significant difference, with the boys (52.06±20.27) obtaining a higher mean value than the girls (46.17±20.56). In conclusion, the current findings indicated that, at this developmental level of competitive sport, boys and girls participants seem to be very similar regarding their sport psychological skills dispositions.Keywords: Adolescents; Gender differences; Participation; Profile; Psychological skills; Sports participants

    Depression, cardiometabolic function and left ventricular hypertrophy in African men and women: the SABPA study

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    Depressive symptoms are associated with an increased risk for developing cardiovascular diseases, driven by its link to the metabolic syndrome (MetS). This phenomenon, however, still needs to be investigated in the African population. The aim of this study is to investigate the association between left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and MetS risk markers in a determined sample. The researchers stratified Black African men and women into with depressive symptoms (D) or without depressive symptoms (ND) group, based on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition criteria score. Fasting MetS, chronic hyperglycemia (HbA1c), ambulatory blood pressure (BP) and Cornell product-LVH (CP-LVH) in ECG measures were obtained. Depressive symptoms were reported in 45.3% of the sample. Independent of depression status, African men and women revealed a pre-diabetic state (glycated hemoglobin >5.7%). CP-LVH was associated with decreased low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol in D African women. In D African men, systolic BP (P = .001) and HbA1c (P = .08) explained 64% and 31% of the variation in LVH, respectively. In conclusion, depressive symptoms in Black African women were associated with a measure of target end organ damage, CP-LVH, and this association was driven by a metabolic factor. In Black African men, independent of depressive symptoms, LVH, was driven by cardiometabolic factors, namely SBP and HbA1c

    Blunted neuro-endocrine responses linking depressive symptoms and ECG left ventricular hypertrophy in black Africans: the SABPA study

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    Objective: Chronic psychosocial stress as experienced in an urban environment plays an important role in the aetiology of depression-related cardiovascular risk. It is uncertain whether acute mental stress responses aggravate this risk. Therefore, we aimed to explore the associations between depressive symptoms, neuroendocrine acute mental stress responses and cardiovascular risk, that is ECG-left ventricular hypertrophy (ECG-LVH), in a black South African cohort. Materials and methods: The substudy sample consisted of 179 black African men and women from the Sympathetic Activity and Ambulatory Blood Pressure in Africans study. Depressive symptoms were evaluated using the nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire and the participants were stratified into black Africans with depressive symptoms and without. Cortisol and 3-methoxy-phenylglycol (MHPG) responses were analysed during rest and exposure to the Stroop mental stressor. Cortisol median split responses were determined and stratified sex groups accordingly into above (>1.5 ng/ml) and below (≤1.5 ng/ml) responders. Blood pressure and ECG-LVH data were obtained from 24-h ambulatory monitoring and 12-lead ECG. Results: The Africans with depressive symptoms demonstrated mean hypertensive status, blunted cortisol and MHPG acute mental stress responses (P≤0.05). In Africans with depressive symptoms and low cortisol stress responses, blunted MHPG acute mental stress responses were associated with ECG-LVH in Africans [adjusted R 2=0.20; β=0.92 (95% confidence interval 0.74, 1.10); P≤0.02]. Conclusion: Blunted neuroendocrine responses were linked to depressive symptoms and ECG-LVH in black Africans. When coupled to their hypertensive status, these vasoconstrictive agent responses may underpin the increased long-term depression and vascular disease risk in urban Africans

    Depression symptoms facilitated fibrinolytic dysregulation and future coronary artery disease risk in a black male cohort: the sympathetic activity and ambulatory blood pressure in Africans study

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    Background: Hypercoagulation is associated with coronary artery disease (CAD). Whether depression symptoms dysregulate inflammatory and hemostatic markers in an African cohort is not known; therefore, we assessed the relationship between depressive symptoms and inflammatory and hemostatic markers as potential CAD risk markers in an African sex cohort. Material and Methods: We included 181 black African urban-dwelling teachers (88 men, 93 women; aged 25-60 years) from the Sympathetic Activity and Ambulatory Blood Pressure in Africans Study. The Patient Health Questionnaire was used to assess depressive symptoms. Fasting plasma concentrations of C-reactive protein, fibrinogen, D-dimer, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and 24-hour blood pressure measures were obtained. Results: Moderately severe depression symptom status was similar in the black sex groups. Both sex groups showed a mean hypertensive state and low-grade inflammation (C-reactive protein > 3 mg/L). Levels of PAI-1 were higher in depressed men, whereas D-dimer levels were lower in depressed women when considering concomitant confounders. In black men only, depressive symptoms were associated with levels of PAI-1 (adj. R2 = 0.12; [beta] = .22 [95% confidence interval, .0-.44]; P = .04) and D-dimer (adj. R2 = 0.12; [beta] = .28 [95% confidence interval, .08-.48]; P = .01), independent of confounders. Conclusion: In black men, depression symptoms accompanied by a mean hypertensive status may up-regulate inflammatory and thrombotic processes. Depression symptoms in black men facilitated hypercoagulation or fibrinolytic dysregulation and potentially increased their CAD risk. Early screening of fibrinolytic markers and for the presence of depressive symptoms is recommende
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