Title
Relationship of psychological and physiological variables in long-term self-monitored data during work ability rehabilitation program.
Abstract
Individual wellness comprises both psychological and physiological wellbeing, which are interrelated. In long-term monitoring of wellness, both components should be included. Work-related stress and burnout are persistent problems in industrial countries. Early identification of work-related stress symptoms and early intervention could reduce individual suffering and improve the working productivity and creativity. The goal of this study was to explore the relationship between physiological and psychological variables measured at home by the users themselves or automatically. In all, 17 (3 males and 14 females, age 40-62) people participating in a work ability rehabilitation program (due to work overload) were monitored for three months. Physiological and behavioral variables (activity, bed occupancy, heart rate (HR) and respiration during night, HR during day, blood pressure, steps, weight, room illumination, and temperature) were measured with different unobtrusive wireless sensors. Daily self-assessment of stress, mood, and behaviors (exercise, sleep) were collected using a mobile phone diary. The daily self-assessment of stress and the Derogatis stress profile questionnaire were used as reference for stress status. Results show modest, but significant pooled overall correlations between self-assessed stress level, and physiological and behavioral variables (e.g., sleep length measured with wrist-worn activity monitor: rho = -0.22, p < 0.001, and variance of nightly bedroom illumination: rho = 0.13, p < 0.001). Strong, but sometimes conflicting correlations can be found at individual level, suggesting individual reactions to stress in daily life.
Year
DOI
Venue
2009
10.1109/TITB.2008.2007078
IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine
Keywords
Field
DocType
work-related stress,early intervention,self-assessed stress level,long-term self-monitored data,daily self-assessment,derogatis stress profile questionnaire,work ability rehabilitation program,work-related stress symptom,physiological variable,early identification,physiological wellbeing,stress status,behavioral variable,temperature measurement,psychology,health promotion,human factors,industrial relations,patient monitoring,questionnaires,occupational health,productivity,lighting,health,self assessment,data collection,stress,behavior,sleep,blood pressure,regression analysis
Bedroom,Rehabilitation,Mood,Computer science,Occupational medicine,Physical therapy,Occupational stress,Heart rate,Burnout,Occupational safety and health
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
13
2
1558-0032
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
7
0.67
3
Authors
9
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Juha Pärkkä151044.81
Juho Merilahti2617.75
Elina M. Mattila3282.80
Esko Malm470.67
Kari Antila5291.52
Martti T Tuomisto670.67
Ari Viljam Saarinen770.67
Mark van Gils8185.43
I Korhonen935143.76