BACKGROUND: Post-traumatic stress diseases have been recently applied to understand the impact of work-related stress, but the frequent symptoms overlap and comorbidity with mood disorders induced authors to better investigate the relationship between these disorders with particular attention to gender differences.METHODS: Authors collected socio-demographic, occupational, and clinical data of 345 subjects who presented at the Occupational Health Department of a university hospital over a 3-year-period (2016-2018). Study sample fulfilled the Trauma and Loss Spectrum-Self Report (TA LS-SR) and the Mood Spectrum-Self Report (MOODS-SR), lifetime version.RESULTS: Women reported significant higher rates in the following TALS-SR domains: loss events (P=0.000), grief reactions (P=0.018), emotional, physical and cognitive responses to traumas (P=0.011) and in the following MOODSSR domain: rhythmicity and vegetative functions (P=0.000). A multiple linear regression model identified the following TALS-SR domains: emotional, physical and cognitive responses to traumas and maladaptive coping as significant predictors of MOOD-SR total score. In the end were evidenced strong positive correlations between TA LS-SR total score and the depressive mood (R=0.561), depressive cognition (R=0.582) and rhythmicity and vegetative functions (R=0.500) domains of the MOOD-SR.CONCLUSIONS: Noteworthy correlations between the two psychopathological dimensions emerged and this could bring to a better understanding of the mutual impact of both mood and post-traumatic stress symptoms on physical health in the contest of occupational stress.

Mood spectrum symptoms in a sample of workers complaining occupational stress: correlations with post-traumatic stress spectrum symptoms

Carmassi, C;Bertelloni, CA;Dell'oste, V;Massimetti, E;Marino, R;Foddis, R;Dell'osso, L
2022-01-01

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Post-traumatic stress diseases have been recently applied to understand the impact of work-related stress, but the frequent symptoms overlap and comorbidity with mood disorders induced authors to better investigate the relationship between these disorders with particular attention to gender differences.METHODS: Authors collected socio-demographic, occupational, and clinical data of 345 subjects who presented at the Occupational Health Department of a university hospital over a 3-year-period (2016-2018). Study sample fulfilled the Trauma and Loss Spectrum-Self Report (TA LS-SR) and the Mood Spectrum-Self Report (MOODS-SR), lifetime version.RESULTS: Women reported significant higher rates in the following TALS-SR domains: loss events (P=0.000), grief reactions (P=0.018), emotional, physical and cognitive responses to traumas (P=0.011) and in the following MOODSSR domain: rhythmicity and vegetative functions (P=0.000). A multiple linear regression model identified the following TALS-SR domains: emotional, physical and cognitive responses to traumas and maladaptive coping as significant predictors of MOOD-SR total score. In the end were evidenced strong positive correlations between TA LS-SR total score and the depressive mood (R=0.561), depressive cognition (R=0.582) and rhythmicity and vegetative functions (R=0.500) domains of the MOOD-SR.CONCLUSIONS: Noteworthy correlations between the two psychopathological dimensions emerged and this could bring to a better understanding of the mutual impact of both mood and post-traumatic stress symptoms on physical health in the contest of occupational stress.
2022
Carmassi, C; Buselli, R; Corsi, M; Baldanzi, S; Chiumiento, M; Veltri, A; Bertelloni, Ca; Dell'Oste, V; Massimetti, E; Marino, R; Necciari, G; Foddis, R; Guglielmi, G; Cristaudo, A; Dell'Osso, L
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/1161253
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact