Cognitive appraisal of stress and health status of wage working and non-wage working women in Jordan.
Author: Hattar Pollara M, Dawani H.
Source:
Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 17(4), 349-356.
This cross-sectional correlation study addresses the stress appraisal of 93
Jordanian wage working and non-wage working single and married women in Jordan
and the relationship of appraised stress to their physical and psychological
health. Data were collected using a demographic interview guide that included a
Likert-type scale addressing perceived global social stress, the Cornell Medical
Index (CMI), and the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS). Perceived stress had no
significant relations with physical and emotional health as measured by the PSS,
but significant relations were found between social stress and indicators of
health. In fact, social stress was the single most significant predictor of
overall health, physical health, and emotional health. The findings on the health
profile of participants and social stress have important implications for future
research and for illness prevention and health promotion initiatives.
Publication Types:
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't