Schoolteachers' well-being: A pilot study from the AVATAR project during COVID-19 school closure

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Abstract

Background: Teachers are a category at high risk for co-occurring mental diseases. Objectives: The purpose was to assess well-being of schoolteachers and psychological effects of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Method: Data were collected in April 2021, during the partial re-opening of public schools in Italy, from 838 schoolteachers who complete a battery of psychological tests on a multimedia platform. Results: In females, school closure increases anxiety (BAI, p < 0.001), depression (BDI-II, p < 0.05), stress-related insomnia (FIRST, p < 0.001), and perceived stress (PSS, p < 0.05). In males, on the contrary, rises perceived health (p < 0.001) and vitality (p < 0.001), also in terms of total score (PWBI p < 0.05). In addition, having a family member with COVID in the past month increased anxiety (BAI, p < 0.05), reduced perceived physical health (PWBI, p < 0.05) and vitality (PWBI, p < 0.05). Conclusion: The main results of this pilot study showed that female teachers had a worse well-being perception with respect to men, in terms of health and vitality and an increase in negative emotional reactivity, that impaired when a family member was affected by COVID. The results emphasize the need to invest in prevention and wellness promotion programs in this professional category.

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Mastorci, F., Lazzeri, M. F. L., Piaggi, P., Doveri, C., Trivellini, G., Casu, A., … Pingitore, A. (2023). Schoolteachers’ well-being: A pilot study from the AVATAR project during COVID-19 school closure. Work, 75(3), 779–786. https://doi.org/10.3233/WOR-220267

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