Psychological Wellbeing of University Academics: The Role of Personality Traits and Perceived Occupational Stress
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Babatunde, Stephen I.
Adebimpe, Oluwafisayo A.
Aliu, Sadiat Iyabo
Abstract / Description
This study examined how personality traits (introversion and extraversion) and perceived occupational stress predict psychological well-being among academic staff in a Nigerian university. A cross-sectional survey design was adopted with a total sample of 200 academic staff selected via stratified random sampling across faculties. Standardized instruments were used to measure psychological well-being, personality traits, and perceived occupational stress and hypotheses tested at 0.05 level of significance. Results showed that 43.5% of respondents had moderate psychological well-being, 29% had low well-being, and 27.5% had very high well-being. The statistical model used (multinomial logistic regression) was a good fit for predicting outcomes (χ²(12) = 94.22, p < .001; Nagelkerke R² = 0.57). Introverted staff were over three times more likely to report low well-being (OR = 3.21, 95% CI [1.89, 5.44]), while extraverted staff were more than twice as likely to report very high well-being (OR = 2.67, 95% CI [1.42, 5.03]). Staff who experienced moderate levels of stress were four times more likely to report average well-being (OR = 4.03, 95% CI [2.14, 7.59]). A chi-square test also confirmed that stress levels varied significantly across well-being categories (χ²(4) = 21.33, p = .002). These findings suggest that both personality and stress levels are important factors in determining how well academic staff cope emotionally. Supporting staff mental health requires attention to both individual personality differences and workplace stress conditions.
Keyword(s)
Psychological well-being Personality traits Occupational stress Academic staff Multinomial logistic regression NigeriaPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2025-07-04
Journal title
Nigerian Journal of Clinical Psychology
Volume
15
Issue
1
Page numbers
155 - 178
Publisher
Nigerian Association of Clinical Psychologists (NACP)
Publication status
publishedVersion
Review status
peerReviewed
Is version of
Citation
Babatunde, S. I., Adebimpe, O. A., & Aliu, S. I. (2025). Psychological Wellbeing of University Academics: The Role of Personality Traits and Perceived Occupational Stress. Nigerian Journal of Clinical Psychology, 15(1), 155–178. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15808774
-
2025 Vol.15 No. 1 155- 178.pdfAdobe PDF - 490.25KBMD5 : f46cd2a6aa1c048add99445fea73be6c
-
There are no other versions of this object.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Babatunde, Stephen I.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Adebimpe, Oluwafisayo A.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Aliu, Sadiat Iyabo
-
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2025-07-07T15:29:12Z
-
Made available on2025-07-07T15:29:12Z
-
Date of first publication2025-07-04
-
Abstract / DescriptionThis study examined how personality traits (introversion and extraversion) and perceived occupational stress predict psychological well-being among academic staff in a Nigerian university. A cross-sectional survey design was adopted with a total sample of 200 academic staff selected via stratified random sampling across faculties. Standardized instruments were used to measure psychological well-being, personality traits, and perceived occupational stress and hypotheses tested at 0.05 level of significance. Results showed that 43.5% of respondents had moderate psychological well-being, 29% had low well-being, and 27.5% had very high well-being. The statistical model used (multinomial logistic regression) was a good fit for predicting outcomes (χ²(12) = 94.22, p < .001; Nagelkerke R² = 0.57). Introverted staff were over three times more likely to report low well-being (OR = 3.21, 95% CI [1.89, 5.44]), while extraverted staff were more than twice as likely to report very high well-being (OR = 2.67, 95% CI [1.42, 5.03]). Staff who experienced moderate levels of stress were four times more likely to report average well-being (OR = 4.03, 95% CI [2.14, 7.59]). A chi-square test also confirmed that stress levels varied significantly across well-being categories (χ²(4) = 21.33, p = .002). These findings suggest that both personality and stress levels are important factors in determining how well academic staff cope emotionally. Supporting staff mental health requires attention to both individual personality differences and workplace stress conditions.en
-
Publication statuspublishedVersion
-
Review statuspeerReviewed
-
CitationBabatunde, S. I., Adebimpe, O. A., & Aliu, S. I. (2025). Psychological Wellbeing of University Academics: The Role of Personality Traits and Perceived Occupational Stress. Nigerian Journal of Clinical Psychology, 15(1), 155–178. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15808774
-
ISSN0189-2304
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/11917
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.16513
-
Language of contenteng
-
PublisherNigerian Association of Clinical Psychologists (NACP)
-
Is version ofhttps://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15808774
-
Keyword(s)Psychological well-being
-
Keyword(s)Personality traits
-
Keyword(s)Occupational stress
-
Keyword(s)Academic staff
-
Keyword(s)Multinomial logistic regression
-
Keyword(s)Nigeria
-
Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
-
TitlePsychological Wellbeing of University Academics: The Role of Personality Traits and Perceived Occupational Stressen
-
DRO typearticle
-
Issue1
-
Journal titleNigerian Journal of Clinical Psychology
-
Page numbers155 - 178
-
Volume15
-
Visible tag(s)Version of Record