The prevalence, grouping, and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients.

Anxiety is prevalent among hospital inpatients and it has harmful effects on patient well-being and clinical outcomes. We aimed to characterize the sources of hospital distress and their relationship to anxiety. We conducted a cross-sectional study of inpatients (n = 271) throughout two Southeastern...

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Main Authors: Patricia K Palmer, Kathryn Wehrmeyer, Marianne P Florian, Charles Raison, Ellen Idler, Jennifer S Mascaro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0260921&type=printable
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author Patricia K Palmer
Kathryn Wehrmeyer
Marianne P Florian
Charles Raison
Ellen Idler
Jennifer S Mascaro
author_facet Patricia K Palmer
Kathryn Wehrmeyer
Marianne P Florian
Charles Raison
Ellen Idler
Jennifer S Mascaro
author_sort Patricia K Palmer
collection DOAJ
description Anxiety is prevalent among hospital inpatients and it has harmful effects on patient well-being and clinical outcomes. We aimed to characterize the sources of hospital distress and their relationship to anxiety. We conducted a cross-sectional study of inpatients (n = 271) throughout two Southeastern U.S. metropolitan hospitals. Participants completed a survey to identify which of 38 stressors they were experiencing. They also completed the State Trait Anxiety Inventory six-item scale. We evaluated the prevalence of stressors, their distribution, and crude association with anxiety. We then used multivariate logistic regression to estimate the association between stressors and clinically relevant anxiety, with and without adjusting for demographic variables. We used factor analysis to describe the interrelationships among stressors and to examine whether groups of stressors tend to be endorsed together. The following stressors were highly endorsed across all unit types: pain, being unable to sleep, feelings of frustration, being overwhelmed, and fear of the unknown. Stressors relating to isolation/meaninglessness and fear/frustration tend to be endorsed together. Stressors were more frequently endorsed by younger, female, and uninsured or Medicaid-insured patients and being female and uninsured was associated with anxiety in bivariate analysis. After controlling for the sources of distress in multivariate linear analysis, gender and insurance status no longer predicted anxiety. Feelings of isolation, lack of meaning, frustration, fear, or a loss of control were predictive. Study results suggest that multiple stressors are prevalent among hospital inpatients and relatively consistent across hospital unit and disease type. Interventions for anxiety or emotional/spiritual burden may be best targeted to stressors that are frequently endorsed or associated with anxiety, especially among young and female patients.
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spelling doaj-art-4becc5989bae4deb94934456ffca9dd52025-08-20T02:55:20ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-011612e026092110.1371/journal.pone.0260921The prevalence, grouping, and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients.Patricia K PalmerKathryn WehrmeyerMarianne P FlorianCharles RaisonEllen IdlerJennifer S MascaroAnxiety is prevalent among hospital inpatients and it has harmful effects on patient well-being and clinical outcomes. We aimed to characterize the sources of hospital distress and their relationship to anxiety. We conducted a cross-sectional study of inpatients (n = 271) throughout two Southeastern U.S. metropolitan hospitals. Participants completed a survey to identify which of 38 stressors they were experiencing. They also completed the State Trait Anxiety Inventory six-item scale. We evaluated the prevalence of stressors, their distribution, and crude association with anxiety. We then used multivariate logistic regression to estimate the association between stressors and clinically relevant anxiety, with and without adjusting for demographic variables. We used factor analysis to describe the interrelationships among stressors and to examine whether groups of stressors tend to be endorsed together. The following stressors were highly endorsed across all unit types: pain, being unable to sleep, feelings of frustration, being overwhelmed, and fear of the unknown. Stressors relating to isolation/meaninglessness and fear/frustration tend to be endorsed together. Stressors were more frequently endorsed by younger, female, and uninsured or Medicaid-insured patients and being female and uninsured was associated with anxiety in bivariate analysis. After controlling for the sources of distress in multivariate linear analysis, gender and insurance status no longer predicted anxiety. Feelings of isolation, lack of meaning, frustration, fear, or a loss of control were predictive. Study results suggest that multiple stressors are prevalent among hospital inpatients and relatively consistent across hospital unit and disease type. Interventions for anxiety or emotional/spiritual burden may be best targeted to stressors that are frequently endorsed or associated with anxiety, especially among young and female patients.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0260921&type=printable
spellingShingle Patricia K Palmer
Kathryn Wehrmeyer
Marianne P Florian
Charles Raison
Ellen Idler
Jennifer S Mascaro
The prevalence, grouping, and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients.
PLoS ONE
title The prevalence, grouping, and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients.
title_full The prevalence, grouping, and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients.
title_fullStr The prevalence, grouping, and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients.
title_full_unstemmed The prevalence, grouping, and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients.
title_short The prevalence, grouping, and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients.
title_sort prevalence grouping and distribution of stressors and their association with anxiety among hospitalized patients
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0260921&type=printable
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