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dc.contributor.authorMittelmark, Maurice
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-23T11:25:50Z
dc.date.available2018-03-23T11:25:50Z
dc.date.issued2018-02-14
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1956/17542
dc.description.abstractThe assessment of stress in epidemiological studies is challenging. Stress has many conceptualisations: chronic versus acute, objective versus subjective, stimulus versus response, and individual versus organisational/societal levels. The measurement of psychosocial stress may focus on physiological activation, the measurement of stressors, or the subjective stress experience. Measurement may be guided by theory, but may just as well not. Kopp, et al’s (2010) overview of measures of psychosocial stress in epidemiological research focuses on demonstrably-reliable instruments “identifying predictors of health status at the population level and … providing useful information about the psychosocial mechanisms by which stressors, perceived stress, and stress reactions might lead to deterioration of health” (ibid, p. 212). Among the instruments reviewed by Kopp, et al (2010) is the Bergen Social Relationships Scale (BSRS), a six-item scale that has been used in English-language published studies in Norway (Aanes, et al., 2009, 1010, 2011), Romania (Bancila, Mittelmark and Hetland, 2006, Bancila and Mittelmark, 2007, 2009), Russia (Bancila, et al, 2009), the United States (Murdock, 2013) and Pakistan (Nazir, 2013). Research with the BSRS in Thailand and in Denmark has yet to be published. A number of BSRS studies published in Hungarian are also in the literature (Susánszky, et al., 2010; Ádám, 2010, Clarke, 2013; Kovacs, et al., 2013).en_US
dc.language.isoengeng
dc.publisherThe University of Bergeneng
dc.subjectChronic social stresseng
dc.subjectBergen Social Relationships Scaleeng
dc.titleIntroduction to the Bergen Social Relationships Scale (BSRS): A short questionnaire for the measurement of psychosocial stress in epidemiological studies (update 2018)eng
dc.typeWorking paper
dc.description.versionupdatedVersion
dc.rights.holderCopyright the author. All rights reservedeng


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