Greater Work-Related Stress Among Chinese Media Workers in the Context of Media Transformation: Specific Stressors and Coping Strategies

Authors

  • Min Wang Wuhan University
  • Zuosu Jiang Central China Normal University

Keywords:

work-related stress, Chinese media transformation, stressors, anxiety, coping strategies

Abstract

A steady rise in unexpected deaths of Chinese media workers from 2011 to 2015 highlights a new social problem. Content analysis of official reports about these deaths reveals the contribution of work-related stress and media transformation. Moreover, surveys and in-depth interviews with 147 Chinese media workers demonstrate that 11 factors related to the current media transformation may magnify work-related stress. These factors stem from characteristics of media transformation, such as the crisis in journalism, the expansion of information and communication technologies, ideological control, and the reorganization of management. This article focuses on newly emerging and Chinese-specific stressors, revealing how media transformation increases stress and causes anxiety. In addition, the article suggests specific coping strategies in the Chinese context.

Author Biographies

Min Wang, Wuhan University

Ph.D., School of Journalism and Communication, Wuhan UniversityVisiting Scholar in University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign

Zuosu Jiang, Central China Normal University

Professor and Dean, School of Journalism and Communication, Central China Normal University

Downloads

Published

2016-11-30

Issue

Section

Articles