ZHANG Qingqi, XIAO Junze, QI Ke, HU Hongwen, LIU Jing, MA Ai, LIU Xiaoqian, ZENG Yuze. Mediating role of mental fatigue between nature exposure and mental health of prison police[J]. Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, 2024, 41(3): 311-317. DOI: 10.11836/JEOM23332
Citation: ZHANG Qingqi, XIAO Junze, QI Ke, HU Hongwen, LIU Jing, MA Ai, LIU Xiaoqian, ZENG Yuze. Mediating role of mental fatigue between nature exposure and mental health of prison police[J]. Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, 2024, 41(3): 311-317. DOI: 10.11836/JEOM23332

Mediating role of mental fatigue between nature exposure and mental health of prison police

  • Background The mental health status of prison officers is crucial to the efficiency, security, and stability of a prison, and it is essential to pay attention to the factors that influence their mental health.
    Objective To understand the mental health status of prison officers, and analyze how nature exposure affects their mental health problems and a potential mediating role of mental fatigue.
    Methods A cross-sectional survey was carried out from May to June 2022 among 1392 prison officers from eight prisons in a province, and a total of 1284 valid questionnaires were recovered. The Nature Exposure Scale, Mental Fatigue Scale, and Depression-Anxiety-Stress Scale were used to assess nature exposure, mental fatigue, and mental health indicators among prison officers, and to explore the effect of nature exposure on mental health problems and a potential mediating role of mental fatigue.
    Results The recruited prison officers showed high levels of depression, anxiety, and stress. The prevalence rates of depression, anxiety, and stress were 59.11% (759/1284), 60.67% (779/1284),and 43.93% (564/1284), respectively. The results of correlation analysis revealed that nature exposure was negatively related with mental fatigue and mental health indicators (depression, anxiety, and stress) (rs=−0.242, −0.308, −0.235, −0.254, P<0.01), while mental fatigue was positively correlated with mental health indicators (depression, anxiety, and stress) (rs=0.546, 0.533, 0.536, P<0.01). The PROCESS macro results showed that the level of nature exposure among prison officers negatively associated with depression, anxiety, and stress (β=−0.180, −0.104, −0.123), and mental fatigue played a mediating role, with indirect effects of −0.200, −0.192, and −0.199, respectively.
    Conclusion The levels of depression, anxiety, and stress of prison officers are higher than those of other occupations. Nature exposure negatively associates with depression, anxiety, and stress, that is, it may directly alleviate the mental health problems of prison officers; and it may also alleviate mental health problems by relieving mental fatigue.
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