California study: Women less stressed at work if they text partner

  • Texting about weather and what’s for supper is the key to surviving office stress 
  • California University study found texts helped deal with high-pressure situations
  • They got 75 couples, separated men from women and monitored stress levels

Swapping texts about the weather and what’s for supper is the key to surviving office stress, scientists claim.

Women receiving mundane messages from their partners are better able to cope with high-pressure situations, a new study has found.

The distraction of trivial text chats with a husband or boyfriend helps keep blood pressure in check, California University psychologists discovered.

Women receiving mundane messages from their partners are better able to cope with high-pressure situations, a new study has found

For their experiment, they recruited 75 couples, separating the men from the women and keeping them in different rooms.

The females were fitted with a blood pressure-measuring cuff and asked to prepare for a public speaking assignment and maths test to recreate the kind of stress people face at work.

As they worked, some received supportive texts from their partners. Others were sent neutral messages and the rest got none.

Those receiving mundane messages felt less extra stress.

The study, in the journal Computers In Human Behaviour, said: ‘This may suggest that the mundane texts provided a distraction from the stressor (while) supportive messages indicated that the partner was aware of the stressful task.’



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