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Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2024

Xiaofei Mao
Affiliation:
Lab for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, Faculty of Psychology, Naval Medical University, Shanghai, China
Tianya Hou
Affiliation:
Faculty of Psychology, Navy Medical University, Shanghai, China
Yulin Zhang
Affiliation:
National Key Laboratory of Human Factors Engineering, Beijing, China China Institute of Marine Technology and Economy, Beijing, China
Jianguo Zhang
Affiliation:
Faculty of Psychology, Navy Medical University, Shanghai, China
Fan Zhang
Affiliation:
Lab for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, Faculty of Psychology, Naval Medical University, Shanghai, China
Weizhi Liu*
Affiliation:
Lab for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, Faculty of Psychology, Naval Medical University, Shanghai, China
*
Corresponding author: Weizhi Liu; Email: 13024141970@163.com
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Abstract

Objective

To reveal the chain mediating roles of insomnia and anxiety between social support and PTSD in nursing staff under the stage of COVID-19 regular pandemic prevention and control in China.

Methods

A total of 784 nurses were recruited using the convenience sampling method in Jiangsu Province, China. Demographic questionnaire, Perceived Social Support Scale, Impact of Event Scale-Revised, Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 and Insomnia Severity Index were applied to collect data.

Results

Social support, PTSD, insomnia and anxiety were significantly correlated with each other. Insomnia and anxiety acted as chain mediators between social support and PTSD.

Conclusion

Insufficient social support may trigger PTSD through the chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety in nursing staff under the stage of COVID-19 regular pandemic prevention and control. Measures focusing on social support, insomnia and anxiety should be taken to reduce or even prevent PTSD in nursing staff in Chinese hospitals in similar crises in the future.

Topics structure

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Hypothesized model about social support, insomnia, anxiety, and PTSD.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Flowchart of subjects’ enrollment in January 2022.

Figure 2

Table 1. Results of bivariate analysis among variables

Figure 3

Figure 3. Chain mediating model about social support, insomnia, anxiety, and PTSD (**P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001).

Figure 4

Table 2. Chain mediating roles of insomnia and anxiety

Author comment: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R0/PR1

Comments

Wei Dong

Faculty of Psychology, Naval Medical University

#800 Xiangyin Road, Shanghai 200433, China

28 Feb, 2024

Dear Editor,

We would like to submit the enclosed manuscript entitled “Impact of social support on PTSD of nursing staff during COVID-19 regular pandemic prevention and control in China: Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety”, which we wish to be considered for publication in “Global Mental Health”. No conflict of interest exits in the submission of this manuscript, and manuscript is approved by all authors for publication. I would like to declare on behalf of my co-authors that the work described was original research that has not been published previously, and not under consideration for publication elsewhere, in whole or in part. All the authors listed have approved the manuscript that is enclosed.

We believe that our study design and results will make it interesting to general readers of your journal. As far as we know, our study is the first to focus on the effect of social support on PTSD among Chinese nursing staff via chain mediating effect of insomnia and anxiety. The results suggest that insufficient social support may lead to PTSD through the chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety among nurses. Interventions on social support, insomnia and anxiety from the hospital management were essential to ameliorate nurses’ PTSD under the regular COVID-19 epidemic prevention and control or similar crises in the future. We hope this paper is suitable for your journal.

We deeply appreciate your consideration of our manuscript, and we look forward to receiving comments from the reviewers. If you have any queries, please don’t hesitate to contact me at dongweinzb@126.com

Thank you and best regards.

Sincerely,

Wei Dong

dongweinzb@126.com

Recommendation: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R0/PR2

Comments

Dear authors, the team of reviewers and I have reviewed the article very carefully, we have comments and we need your revisions and that you send us a new version to continue with the process. We send you the comments below and ask you to respond as soon as possible:

Reviewer 1:

The title effectively piqued my interest, and the overall topic of the article aligns well with current research. However, the reporting of the results could benefit from some improvements.

Current problems:

1. Most of the parts are NOT aligned with Author guidelines.

2. Introduction was written in separated section rather than in a seamless flow.

3. The author described their Methods in details; unfortunately, the formality should be revised to align with journal’s guidelines.

4.To strengthen the connection between the results and their interpretations, the authors could consider reorganizing the evidence for a clearer flow and provide a more nuanced discussion of the implications.

With these revisions, the article would be well-suited for submission to a high-quality journal (Q3-Q4). The authors should not be demotivated with these comments and I wish them all the best with future endeavors.

Reviewer 2:

I have the following comments for the authors to address and I am happy to review this paper again.

1) In the introduction, please discuss the following important research findings:

Search PubMed for: They also perceived the workplace response to COVID-19 as inadequate (score = 2.0, SD = 0.5). In particular, participants who worked in the emergency or intensive care departments were more likely to perceive an exposure risk, compared to those in infectious disease control departments.

Search PubMed for: Nurses had relatively higher percentages of having normal or unchanged psychological distress symptoms relative to other health care workers (n=233-260 [86.0%-95.9%] vs n=187-199 [74.8%-91.7%]). Among those without psychological symptoms, nurses constituted a higher proportion than doctors and nonmedical health care workers (n=194 [40.2%], n=142 [29.5%], and n=146 [30.3%], respectively).

Search PubMed for : In the multivariable analysis, we found that non-medically trained personnel, the presence of physical symptoms and presence of prior medical conditions were independent predictors across the participating countries.

Search PubMed for: a significant association between the prevalence of physical symptoms and psychological outcomes among healthcare workers during the COVID-19 outbreak. We postulate that this association may be bi-directional, and that timely psychological interventions for healthcare workers with physical symptoms should be considered once an infection has been excluded.

Search PubMed for: Being women also had a negative association with scores in “Avoidance of disclosure and discrimination related to COVID 19” domain (Coef. = -0.27, CI: -0.43 to -0.12) while having a positive association with “negative attitude towards working conditions” domain (Coef. = 0.19, CI: 0.09 to 0.3). In addition, working in administrative offices (Coef. = 0.20; 95% CI = 0.05 to 0.36) and infectious departments (Coef. = 0.36; 95% CI = 0.09 to 0.63) had a positive association with “Increased work pressure due to COVID 19” domain.

Search PubMed for: Out of the 906 healthcare workers who participated in the survey, 48 (5.3%) screened positive for moderate to very-severe depression, 79 (8.7%) for moderate to extremely-severe anxiety, 20 (2.2%) for moderate to extremely-severe stress, and 34 (3.8%) for moderate to severe levels of psychological distress. The commonest reported symptom was headache (32.3%), with a large number of participants (33.4%) reporting more than four symptoms.

Search PubMed for: Respondents who knew of someone diagnosed with COVID-19 were more likely to screen positive for depression, stress, and PTSD (OR 1.2, 1.2, and 1.3 respectively, all P < 0.05). Surgical specialties that operated in the head and neck region had higher psychological distress among its surgeons.

2) Under discussion, please discuss the psychological interventions such as Internet CBT to help nurses based on the following findings:

The most evidence-based treatment is cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT), especially Internet CBT that can prevent the spread of infection during the pandemic.

Use of Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) to treat psychiatric symptoms during COVID-19:

Mental Health Strategies to Combat the Psychological Impact of COVID-19 Beyond Paranoia and Panic. Ann Acad Med Singapore. 2020;49(3):155‐160.

Cost-effectiveness of iCBT:

Moodle: The cost effective solution for internet cognitive behavioral therapy (I-CBT) interventions. Technol Health Care. 2017;25(1):163-165. doi: 10.3233/THC-161261. PMID: 27689560.

Internet CBT can treat psychiatric symptoms such as insomnia:

Efficacy of digital cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia: a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Sleep Med. 2020 Aug 26;75:315-325. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2020.08.020. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 32950013.

3) Under discussion, please discuss the limitation for lack of measuring COVID-19 burnout based on the following study:

Search PubMed for: Burnout is an important public health issue at times of the COVID-19 pandemic. Current measures which focus on work-based burnout have limitations in length and/or relevance. When stepping into the post-pandemic as a new Norm Era, the burnout scale for the general population is urgently needed to fill the gap. This study aimed to develop a COVID-19 Burnout Views Scale (COVID-19 BVS) to measure burnout views of the general public in a Chinese context and examine its psychometric properties.

Reviewer 3:

Introduction:

- The introduction lacks clarity regarding the objectives of the study, failing to explicitly state the aim of investigating the relationship between social support, insomnia, anxiety, and PTSD among nursing staff.

- Limited elaboration on the specific challenges faced by nursing staff during the regular pandemic prevention and control phase, reducing the contextual understanding of the study’s relevance and significance.

- Consider providing a brief overview of the theoretical framework guiding the study to enhance understanding for readers.

Methods:

- Reliance on convenience sampling introduces potential bias and limits the generalizability of the findings.

- The cross-sectional design restricts the ability to establish causal relationships between variables, suggesting the need for alternative designs such as longitudinal or experimental approaches.

- Clarify the rationale behind the choice of specific measures and methods used in the study to justify their appropriateness for the research questions.

Results:

- Absence of discussion on potential confounding variables controlled for in the analysis.

- Relatively small sample size may impact the robustness of the findings.

Provide additional context for the interpretation of results by discussing effect sizes and practical significance, not just statistical significance.

Discussion:

- Inadequate discussion of study limitations, including the cross-sectional design and sampling method.

Suggestions for future research could be more expansive to address identified limitations and gaps in the literature.

- Consider integrating implications for clinical practice and policy interventions more explicitly to enhance the practical relevance of the findings.

Conclusion:

- Limited exploration of alternative explanations or factors influencing the observed relationships.

- Lack of nuanced interpretations of findings and their implications for clinical practice and policy interventions.

- Provide a more comprehensive discussion of the theoretical implications of the findings and their alignment with existing literature in the field.

Reviewer4:

This study aims to examine the social support on PTSD of nursing staff during COVID-19 regular pandemic prevention and control in China. There are some follows concerns:

1, it is hard to test the mediate effects through the cross section data.

2, The introduction section is too weak, and lack some improtant references related this issues. Also, it is lack the theory evidence for the chain mediation effects.

3. The logic of the whole text needs to be further sorted out。

4. The sampling is not very clear. For example, from how many hospitals, what type of hospital, etc.

5. Data analysis is inadequate.

Reviewer5:

Details of the PROCESS 3.4.1 (Model 6) could be elaborated for better understanding

Statistics behind figure 2 and figure 3 needs to be explained in detail

Decision: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R0/PR3

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R1/PR4

Comments

Cover letter

Weizhi Liu

Faculty of Psychology, Naval Medical University

#800 Xiangyin Road, Shanghai 200433, China

7 Jun, 2024

Dear Editor,

We would like to submit the enclosed manuscript entitled “Impact of social support on PTSD of nursing staff during COVID-19 regular pandemic prevention and control in China: Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety”, which we wish to be considered for publication in “Global Mental Health”. No conflict of interest exits in the submission of this manuscript, and manuscript is approved by all authors for publication. I would like to declare on behalf of my co-authors that the work described was original research that has not been published previously, and not under consideration for publication elsewhere, in whole or in part. All the authors listed have approved the manuscript that is enclosed.

We believe that our study design and results will make it interesting to general readers of your journal. As far as we know, our study is the first to focus on the effect of social support on PTSD among Chinese nursing staff via chain mediating effect of insomnia and anxiety. The results suggest that insufficient social support may lead to PTSD through the chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety among nurses. Interventions on social support, insomnia and anxiety from the hospital management were essential to ameliorate nurses’ PTSD under the regular COVID-19 epidemic prevention and control or similar crises in the future. We hope this paper is suitable for your journal.

We deeply appreciate your consideration of our manuscript, and we look forward to receiving comments from the reviewers. If you have any queries, please don’t hesitate to contact me at 13024141970@163.com.

Thank you and best regards.

Sincerely,

Weizhi Liu

13024141970@163.com

Recommendation: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R1/PR5

Comments

Dear authors, thank you very much for reviewing the article, we return the pampering with very few suggestions.

Review 1

Good edits were incorporated for revisions.

Minor suggestions for improvement:

1) keyword - nursing (plural) instead of nurse (singular)

2) “corelated” should be corrected to “correlated”.

3) “Dec” should be written as “December” in “The current research was conducted in December 2022.”

4) In “Exclusive criteria: diagnosed with psychiatry illness before.”, “psychiatry” should be changed to “psychiatric.”

5) In “The mean age of the participants was 26.37±6.59 years old.”, it is recommended to specify which value is the mean and which is the standard deviation to avoid ambiguity. For example, “The mean age of the participants was 26.37 years with a standard deviation of 6.59.”

6) In “The stress-buffering hypothesis supposed that social support played a role in buffering stress via increasing the levels of self-efficacy and self-esteem.”, “supposed” should be “supposes.”

7) “interpret to” should be revised to “infer from” in “Moreover, existing evidence reveal the protective effect of support from organizations to sleep quality among Chinese healthcare workers.”

8) In “Hyphothesized model about social support, insomnia, anxiety, and PTSD.”, “Hyphothesized” should be corrected to “Hypothesized.”

9) “Figure 2. Flowchart of subjects’ enrollment.” should have a period at the end to make it consistent with other figure captions.

10) “Harman single factor test was selected to detect if common method bias existed in this study.” could be revised to “Harman single-factor test was chosen to detect the presence of common method bias in this study.”

11) “chain mediating model” could be clarified to avoid confusion. It may benefit from further explanation or a brief definition. What is chain mediating model?

12) The statement “However, burnout wasn’t involved in the present study.” could be rephrased as “However, burnout was not considered in the present study.”

13) “To sum up,” could be changed to “In conclusion,” or “To conclude,” for variety.

14) In the last sentence of the conclusion paragraph, consider revising “actions focusing on the improvement of insomnia and anxiety also need to be taken” for better clarity.

Thank you!

Decision: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R1/PR6

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R2/PR7

Comments

Cover letter

Weizhi Liu

Faculty of Psychology, Naval Medical University

#800 Xiangyin Road, Shanghai 200433, China

7 Jun, 2024

Dear Editor,

We would like to submit the enclosed manuscript entitled “Impact of social support on PTSD of nursing staff during COVID-19 regular pandemic prevention and control in China: Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety”, which we wish to be considered for publication in “Global Mental Health”. No conflict of interest exits in the submission of this manuscript, and manuscript is approved by all authors for publication. I would like to declare on behalf of my co-authors that the work described was original research that has not been published previously, and not under consideration for publication elsewhere, in whole or in part. All the authors listed have approved the manuscript that is enclosed.

We believe that our study design and results will make it interesting to general readers of your journal. As far as we know, our study is the first to focus on the effect of social support on PTSD among Chinese nursing staff via chain mediating effect of insomnia and anxiety. The results suggest that insufficient social support may lead to PTSD through the chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety among nurses. Interventions on social support, insomnia and anxiety from the hospital management were essential to ameliorate nurses’ PTSD under the regular COVID-19 epidemic prevention and control or similar crises in the future. We hope this paper is suitable for your journal.

We deeply appreciate your consideration of our manuscript, and we look forward to receiving comments from the reviewers. If you have any queries, please don’t hesitate to contact me at 13024141970@163.com.

Thank you and best regards.

Sincerely,

Weizhi Liu

13024141970@163.com

Recommendation: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R2/PR8

Comments

No comments.

Decision: Impact of social support on PTSD : Chain mediating effects of insomnia and anxiety — R2/PR9

Comments

No accompanying comment.