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  4. Patterns of psychological responses among the public during the early phase of covid-19: A cross-regional analysis
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Patterns of psychological responses among the public during the early phase of covid-19: A cross-regional analysis

Journal
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Date Issued
April 2, 2021
Author(s)
Chong, Yuen Yu  
Chien, Wai Tong  
Cheng, Ho Yu  
Lamnisos, Demetris  
Lubenko, Jelena  
Presti, Giovambattista  
Squatrito, Valeria  
Constantinou, Marios  
Nicolaou, Christiana  
Papacostas, Savvas S.  
Aydin, Gökçen  
Ruiz, Francisco J.  
Garcia-Martin, Maria B.  
Obando-Posada, Diana P.  
Segura-Vargas, Miguel A.  
Vasiliou, Vasilis S.  
McHugh, Louise  
Höfer, Stefan  
Baban, Adriana  
Neto, David Dias  
Nunes da Silva, Ana  
Monestès, Jean-Louis  
Alvarez-Galvez, Javier  
Paez-Blarrina, Marisa  
Montesinos, Francisco  
Valdivia-Salas, Sonsoles  
Ori, Dorottya  
Kleszcz, Bartosz  
Lappalainen, Raimo  
Ivanovic, Iva  
Gosar, David  
Dionne, Frederick  
Merwin, Rhonda M.  
Gloster, Andrew T.  
Karekla, Maria  
Kassianos, Angelos P.  
DOI
10.3390/ijerph18084143
Abstract
This study aimed to compare the mediation of psychological flexibility, prosociality and coping in the impacts of illness perceptions toward COVID-19 on mental health among seven regions. Convenience sampled online survey was conducted between April and June 2020 from 9130 citizens in 21 countries. Illness perceptions toward COVID-19, psychological flexibility, prosociality, coping and mental health, socio-demographics, lockdown-related variables and COVID-19 status were assessed. Results showed that psychological flexibility was the only significant mediator in the relationship between illness perceptions toward COVID-19 and mental health across all regions (all ps = 0.001–0.021). Seeking social support was the significant mediator across subgroups (all ps range = <0.001–0.005) except from the Hong Kong sample (p = 0.06) and the North and South American sample (p = 0.53). No mediation was found for problem-solving (except from the Northern European sample, p = 0.009). Prosociality was the significant mediator in the Hong Kong sample (p =0.016) and the Eastern European sample (p = 0.008). These findings indicate that fostering psychological flexibility may help to mitigate the adverse mental impacts of COVID-19 across regions. Roles of seeking social support, problem-solving and prosociality vary across regions.
Subjects

COVID-19

Mental health

Prosociality

Psychological flexibi...

Survey

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ijerph-18-04143-v4.pdf

Size

734.44 KB

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Checksum (MD5)

c77718f5968e86d60260d81783d1fbba

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