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CULTIVATING PSYCHOLOGICAL CAPITAL TO MITIGATE STRESS AND ENHANCE WELL-BEING IN THAI AVIATION |
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| รหัสดีโอไอ | |
| Creator | Punpong SUWANVATIN |
| Title | CULTIVATING PSYCHOLOGICAL CAPITAL TO MITIGATE STRESS AND ENHANCE WELL-BEING IN THAI AVIATION |
| Contributor | Rewadee WATAKAKOSOL, Sompoch IAMSUPASIT, Juthatip WIWATTANAPANTUWONG, Parinya SIRIATTAKUL |
| Publisher | Asian Interdisciplinary and Sustainability Review |
| Publication Year | 2569 |
| Journal Title | Asian Interdisciplinary and Sustainability Review |
| Journal Vol. | 15 |
| Journal No. | 1 |
| Page no. | Article 6 |
| Keyword | Psychological Capital, Subjective Well-Being, Stress Management, Flight Attendants, Human Resource Strategy |
| URL Website | https://so05.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/PSAKUIJIR |
| Website title | https://so05.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/PSAKUIJIR/article/view/285839 |
| ISSN | 3027-6535 |
| Abstract | Commercial aviation exposes flight attendants to immense job demands, significantly elevating occupational stress and degrading subjective well-being. Grounded in the Job Demands-Resources theory, this study robustly evaluates the effectiveness of a structured Psychological Capital Intervention specifically designed to mitigate stress and foster subjective well-being among Thai flight attendants. A quasi-experimental, matched pretest-posttest control group design was conducted with sixty operational flight attendants, equally divided into experimental and control groups. The comprehensive four-week intervention featured weekly face-to-face training sessions incorporating cognitive reframing, resilience training, and mindfulness practices to build hope, efficacy, resilience, and optimism systematically. Analyzing the data using a two-way mixed-design ANOVA revealed statistically significant time-by-condition interactions. The intervention group demonstrated substantial reductions in perceived stress alongside marked improvements in composite subjective well-being, whereas the control group exhibited no significant baseline changes. These compelling empirical findings highlight that the targeted development of psychological capital is a crucial personal resource that effectively buffers against unpredictable occupational stressors. Ultimately, this vital research positions psychological interventions as strategic investments in human resource management for cultivating a resilient and highly engaged workforce in high-stress Asian aviation service environments. |