Leibniz Institute for Resilience Research (LIR), D-55122 Mainz, Germany.
Leibniz Institute for Resilience Research (LIR), D-55122 Mainz, Germany; Neuroimaging Center, Focus Program Translational Neuroscience, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, D-55131 Mainz, Germany.
Trends Cogn Sci. 2022 Dec;26(12):1171-1189. doi: 10.1016/j.tics.2022.09.017. Epub 2022 Oct 24.
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a major societal disruption, raising the question of how people can maintain or quickly regain their mental health (i.e., be resilient) during such times. Researchers have used the pandemic as a use case for studying resilience in response to a global, synchronously starting, and chronic set of stressors on the individual and societal level. Our review of this recent literature reveals that mental distress trajectories during the pandemic largely resemble mental distress responses to individual-level macro-stressors, except for a lower prevalence of recovery trajectories. Results suggest more resilient responses in older adults, but trajectories are less consistent for younger and older ages compared with middle-aged adults. We call for more research integrating state-of-the-art operationalizations of resilience and using these to study resilience over the lifespan.
COVID-19 大流行导致了重大的社会混乱,引发了人们如何在这种时候保持或快速恢复心理健康(即有韧性)的问题。研究人员利用大流行作为一个案例来研究个体和社会层面应对全球同步开始的慢性压力源的韧性。我们对这一最新文献的回顾表明,大流行期间的精神困扰轨迹与个体层面宏观压力源的精神困扰反应大致相似,但恢复轨迹的流行率较低。结果表明,老年人的反应更有韧性,但与中年成年人相比,年轻人和老年人的轨迹不太一致。我们呼吁更多的研究整合韧性的最新操作化,并利用这些研究来研究整个生命周期的韧性。