Daily Hassles Flashcards

1
Q

What are daily hassles?

A

Minor, irritating, frustrating events that happen every day that can wear people down so that they become more vulnerable to physical and/or psychological problems

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2
Q

What are uplifts?

A

Small positive experiences which cheer people up and counteract stress and they can offset the impact of the hassles

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3
Q

How are daily hassles measured?

A

The hassles and uplifts scale

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4
Q

Who created the hassles and uplifts scale?

A

Kenner et al

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5
Q

Who conducted the first study into daily hassles?

A

Bouteyre et al

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6
Q

What was the method of the first study into daily hassles?

A

Studied 233 students and investigated the relationship between daily hassles and their mental health during the transition from school to university. All participants were first year psychology students at a French university. They all completed a hassles scale and the beck depression inventory. The two scores were correlated

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7
Q

What were the findings and conclusion of study 1?

A

41% of student suffers from depression and there was a positive correlation between the scores on the hassles scale and depression

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8
Q

What are two limitations of study 1?

A
  • correlational so cause and effect can’t be established

- sample was not representative

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9
Q

Who conducted the second study on daily hassles?

A

Gervais

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10
Q

What was the method of study 2?

A

Conducted a correlational study by asking nurses to keep diaries for a month recording so, their daily hassles and uplifts while at work. They were also asked to rate their own performance

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11
Q

What were the findings and conclusion of study 2?

A

Daily hassles increased job strain and decreased job performance. However the nurses did feel that some uplifts counteracted the negative effects of the daily hassles. This shows that there is a relationship between daily hassles and poor job performance but that uplifts counteract this

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12
Q

What is a strength of Gervais study?

A

Overcame the problems of retrospective recall by using s diary method, where participants rated daily hassles and uplifts on a daily basis

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13
Q

What are two limitations of Gervais study?

A
  • sample not representative

- correlational

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14
Q

What are two strengths of daily hassles?

A
  • it’s an improvement on the SRRS as it measures how stressful the participant sees the situation
  • it has been supported by other studies therefore making the findings more reliable
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15
Q

What are two limitations of daily hassles?

A
  • may be differences between males and females as they have different roles within the family
  • asking people to recall hassles and uplifts retrospectively may not be accurate as people’s memory for events can be unreliable
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16
Q

Why is there a correlation between daily hassles and illness?

A
  1. Less social support for daily hassles
  2. Amplification effect- life events combine with hassles
  3. Accumulation effect- go through lots of daily hassles