Department of Psychology, University of Regina, Regina, SK, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Regina, Regina, SK, Canada.
J Anxiety Disord. 2021 Jun;81:102418. doi: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2021.102418. Epub 2021 May 11.
There is considerable evidence of widespread emotional distress associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. A growing number of studies have assessed posttraumatic growth related to the current pandemic; but, none have considered whether reported growth is real or illusory (i.e., characterized by avoidant or defensive coping that results in higher levels of distress). The purpose of this study was to extend this literature by assessing growth specific to the pandemic in people reporting high levels of COVID-related stress and estimating the extent of real and illusory COVID-19-related growth.
Participants were 893 adults from Canada and the United States with high levels of COVID-related stress who provided complete responses on measures of posttraumatic growth, disability, and measures of general and COVID-related distress as part of a larger longitudinal survey.
Approximately 77 % of participants reported moderate to high growth in at least one respect, the most common being developing greater appreciation for healthcare workers, for the value of one's own life, for friends and family, for each day, as well as changing priorities about what is important in life and greater feelings of self-reliance. Consistent with predictions, cluster analysis identified two clusters characterized by high growth, one comprising 32 % of the sample and reflective of real growth (i.e., reporting little disability and stable symptoms across time) and the other comprising 17 % of the sample and reflective of illusory growth (i.e., reporting high disability and worsening symptoms). These clusters did not differ in terms of socially desirable response tendencies; but, the illusory growth cluster reported greater increases in alcohol use since onset of the pandemic.
Consistent with research regarding personal growth in response to prior pandemics and COVID-19, we found evidence to suggest moderate to high levels of COVID-related growth with respect to appreciation for healthcare workers, life, friends and family, and self-reliance. Findings from our cluster analysis support the thesis that many reports of COVID-related personal growth reflect ineffectual pandemic-related coping as opposed to true growth. These findings have important implications for developing strategies to optimize stress resilience and posttraumatic growth during chronically stressful events such as pandemics.
与 COVID-19 大流行相关的普遍情绪困扰有大量证据。越来越多的研究评估了与当前大流行相关的创伤后成长;但是,没有研究考虑报告的成长是真实的还是虚幻的(即,表现为回避或防御性应对,导致更高水平的困扰)。本研究的目的是通过评估报告 COVID 相关压力水平高的人群中与大流行相关的特定成长,扩展这一文献,并估计真实和虚幻的 COVID-19 相关成长的程度。
参与者是来自加拿大和美国的 893 名成年人,他们的 COVID 相关压力水平较高,作为更大的纵向调查的一部分,他们提供了创伤后成长、残疾以及一般和 COVID 相关困扰的测量结果的完整回答。
大约 77%的参与者报告了至少在一个方面的中度到高度成长,最常见的是对医护人员、自己的生命、朋友和家人、每一天、以及改变生活中重要的事情的优先事项的更大欣赏,以及更大的自力更生感。与预测一致,聚类分析确定了两个以高成长为特征的聚类,一个由样本的 32%组成,反映了真实的成长(即报告很少的残疾和随着时间的推移稳定的症状),另一个由样本的 17%组成,反映了虚幻的成长(即报告高残疾和恶化的症状)。这两个聚类在社会期望反应倾向方面没有差异;但是,虚幻的成长聚类报告称,自大流行开始以来,酒精使用量增加了。
与先前大流行和 COVID-19 中个人成长的研究一致,我们有证据表明,在对医护人员、生命、朋友和家人以及自力更生的欣赏方面,与 COVID 相关的成长程度适中到较高。我们的聚类分析结果支持这样的论点,即许多与 COVID 相关的个人成长报告反映了与大流行相关的无效应对,而不是真正的成长。这些发现对制定在长期压力事件(如大流行)期间优化压力弹性和创伤后成长的策略有重要意义。