Counselling preparedness and responsiveness of industrial psychologists in the face of COVID-19.
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Date
2021-05-17
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SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) declared the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019
(COVID-19) as a pandemic in March 2020. For much of the following year, the COVID-19
pandemic had a bewildering and unprecedented effect on all aspects of society across the globe
(Gautam & Sharma, 2020). For instance, in March 2020 the South African government
implemented drastic measures to curb the spread of the virus, breaking existing social and
economic forms of contact (Arndt et al., 2020). It quickly became evident that the direct and
indirect psychological and social effects of the pandemic were pervasive and could affect
mental health long after the pandemic itself is over (Holmes et al., 2020). As a result of prolonged
lockdown and business closures, people experienced social isolation, lifestyle disruptions and
loss of personal income, whilst society lost its productivity in a crippled economy (Tan et al.,
2020). This pandemic has exacerbated stressors in a healthcare system in which burnout, a
response to workplace stress, is already endemic (Restauri & Sheridan, 2020).
Given this global impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, there is much speculation about the effects
it will have on the future of work and on people working in organisations (Rudolph et al., 2020).
Indeed, the influence of the pandemic has provoked a career shock in many people (Akkermans,
Richardson, & Kraimer, 2020; Hite & McDonald, 2020). There have been tangible effects on work-
related processes, including job losses and large-scale implementation of new remote labour
policies (Adalja, Toner, & Inglesby, 2020).These changes have imposed numerous psychological
stressors upon individuals (Van Bavel et al., 2020). For
example, people are experiencing increased work and family
demands, especially as they navigate the need to re-balance
multiple work-related roles with their personal lives.
Frontline employees such as healthcare workers needed
increased levels of resilience, as they continued to attempt to
save lives whilst battling snowballing numbers of infected
people (Hite & McDonald, 2020). External demands
(e.g. increased uncertainty about job security, financial
difficulties) are likewise accumulating. Sibley et al. (2020)
reported that the nationwide lockdown in New Zealand
resulted in higher rates of mental distress. Zacher and
Rudolph (2020) reported decreases in life satisfaction and
positive affect in a German sample (N = 979). In India, a 20%
increase in patients with mental illness has been reported
since the COVID-19 outbreak (Loiwal, 2020).
This emerging evidence of the impact of the COVID-19
pandemic on mental health echoes WHO concerns about
its long-term psychosocial consequences (WHO, 2020a).
Specifically, there are concerns about increased experiences of
loneliness, anxiety, depression, insomnia, harmful substance
use, self-harm and suicidal behaviour (WHO, 2020b). Kumar
and Nayar (2020) suggest that one of the major challenges in
mitigating mental health consequences of the pandemic is the
lack of mental health professionals, practitioners and
counsellors.
Industrial-organisational psychologists (IOPs) are professionals
who specialise in the psychology of work and human behaviour
in organisations (Van Vuuren, 2010). The Health Professions Act
(2006) (Health Professions Council of South Africa [HPCSA],
2011) postulates that the main tasks of IOPs are to:
[P]lan, develop and apply paradigms, theories, models,
constructs and principles of psychology to issues related to the
world of work in order to understand, modify and enhance
individual, group and organisational behaviour, well-being and
effectiveness. (p. 9)
Hence, IOPs should support well-balanced employees
towards a process of development and optimisation.
Although a key focus for IOPs is to ensure workplace
readiness and compliance with occupational health and
safety measures (Rudolph et al., 2020), it is clear that
COVID-19 workplace interventions should address not only
the physiological but also the psychological needs of
employees (e.g. via counselling procedures) (Zhou et al.,
2020). The purpose of this study was to determine the
preparedness and crisis responsiveness of IOPs as related
to workplace counselling.
Description
Keywords
COVID-19, mental health, counselling, industrial psychology, preparedness, responsiveness
Citation
Du Plessis, M., & Thomas, E.C. (2021). Counselling preparedness and responsiveness of industrial psychologists in the face of COVID-19. SA Journal of Industrial Psychology/SA Tydskrif vir Bedryfsielkunde, 47(0), a1860. https://doi. org/10.4102/sajip.v47i0.1860