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How do you think about stress? A qualitative analysis of beliefs about stress.

Christopher Jon KilbyKerry A ShermanViviana Wuthrich
Published in: Journal of health psychology (2020)
This qualitative study aimed to identify common stress beliefs. Undergraduate psychology students (N = 35) completed semi-structured interviews discussing the sensations, causes, purpose, valence, consequences, control, and timeline of stress. Interviews were analysed via double-coded thematic analysis employing a latent, inductive, and realist framework. Five themes (cognition, emotion, physical health, interpersonal relations, and behaviour) and 17 subthemes were identified. Themes and subthemes were validated in a Delphi study of experts in stress research (N = 14). Many of these identified beliefs have not been incorporated into current measures of stress beliefs, suggesting the need for new approaches to measuring this construct.
Keyphrases
  • stress induced
  • public health
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • depressive symptoms
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • heat stress
  • health information