Stress may drive people to give as well as receive emotional support

Summary: Experiencing stress made people more likely to give emotional support as well as receive support from others.

Source: Penn State

Stress has a justifiably bad reputation for making people feel crummy. But new research suggests that despite its negative side effects, it may also lead to a surprising social benefit.

In a study, a team of scientists including Penn State researchers found that experiencing stress made people both more likely to give and receive emotional support from another person. This was true on the day they experienced the stressor as well as the following day.

David Almeida, professor of human development and family studies, said the results — recently published in the journal Stress & Health — suggest that while stress can certainly lead to negative health outcomes, there are potential benefits, as well.

“Our findings suggest that just because we have a bad day, that doesn’t mean it has to be completely unhealthy,” Almeida said. “If stress can actually connect us with other people, which I think is absolutely vital to the human experience, I think that’s a benefit. Stress could potentially help people deal with negative situations by driving them to be with other people.”

Almeida said that while the negative effects of stress — such as heart disease, compromised immune function and depressive symptoms — are well-documented, he and the other researchers were curious if there were potential benefits to stress, such as emotional support.

“Looking at the current research, I realized that a lot of studies looked at how emotional support is beneficial to other health outcomes, but not many looked at the determinants of social support,” said Hye Won Chai, a Penn State graduate student in health and human development. “We thought that stress could be a facilitator in these interpersonal exchanges.”

For the study, the researchers interviewed 1,622 participants every night for eight nights. They asked the participants about their stressors and whether they gave or received emotional support on that day. Stressors included arguments, stressful events at work or school, and stressful events at home.

The researchers found that on average, participants were more than twice as likely to either give or receive emotional support on days they experienced a stressor. Additionally, they were 26 percent more likely to give or receive support the following day. The researchers said that while this effect, on average, was found across the participants, it differed slightly between men and women.

“Women tended to engage in more giving and receiving emotional support than men,” Chai said. “This supports previous findings that women tend to seek more emotional support from other people when they’re stressed. In our study, men were also more likely to engage in emotional support on days they were stressed, but to a lesser extent than women.”

The researchers said they were surprised that stress was linked to people not just receiving emotional support, but giving it, as well. Almeida said he initially thought that giving emotional support was the stressor itself, but he reconsidered when they discovered the effect lasted through the next day.

Almeida said that while the negative effects of stress — such as heart disease, compromised immune function and depressive symptoms — are well-documented, he and the other researchers were curious if there were potential benefits to stress, such as emotional support. The image is in the public domain.

“We saw that someone experiencing a stressor today actually predicted them giving emotional support the next day,” Almeida said. “This made me think that it’s actually possible that stress helps to drive you to other people and allows it to be ok to talk about problems — your problems, my problems.”

Almeida added that the results could help practitioners enhance and design better interventions for targeting stress.

“The findings suggest that an intervention geared toward social interaction rather than individual may be very beneficial,” Almeida said. “If we’re naturally being drawn toward other people when we’re stressed to get help, then interventions may benefit by incorporating the people around us.”

Susanna Joo and Hey Jung Jun, both from Yonsei University, also participated in this work.

Funding: The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Successful Midlife Development and the National Institute on Aging helped support this research.

About this neuroscience research article

Source:
Penn State
Media Contacts:
Katie Bohn – Penn State
Image Source:
The image is in the public domain.

Original Research: Closed access
“Daily stressors facilitate giving and receiving of emotional support in adulthood”. Susanna Joo, Hye Won Chai, Hey Jung Jun, David M. Almeida.
Stress & Health doi:10.1002/smi.2927.

Abstract

Daily stressors facilitate giving and receiving of emotional support in adulthood

The aims of the present study were to examine whether daily stressors are associated with engagement in emotional support and whether these associations differ by gender. Analyses were conducted using Wave 2 of Midlife in the United States data and its subproject National Study of Daily Experiences. The sample consisted of adults aged 33 to 84 (N = 1,622). Using multinomial multilevel analysis, we looked at the associations between lagged and concurrent daily stressors with engagement in emotional support. For concurrent associations, people who experienced stressors were more likely to both give and receive, solely give, and solely receive emotional support compared with those who did not have any stressors. Women were more likely to engage in both giving and receiving of emotional support compared with men when they experienced stressors during the same day. In terms of the lagged associations, both men and women who experienced stressors during the previous day were more likely to both give and receive emotional support the next day compared with those who did not experience any stressors during the previous day. These results suggest that experiencing daily stressors facilitates giving and receiving of emotional support at daily level in adulthood.

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