Department of Community Health Sciences, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles.
Department of Psychological Science, University of California, Irvine.
Health Psychol. 2024 Oct;43(10):705-717. doi: 10.1037/hea0001394. Epub 2024 Jul 25.
Cognitive strategies like finding benefits during adversity may facilitate coping during collective stressors (like COVID-19) by reducing distress or motivating health protective behaviors.
We explored relationships between benefit finding, collective- and individual-level adversity exposure, psychological distress, and health protective behaviors using longitudinal data collected during the COVID-19 era from a representative, probability-based sample of U.S. residents: Wave 1 ( = 6,514, March 18, 2020-April 18, 2020, 58.5% completion rate); Wave 2 ( = 5,661, September 26, 2020-October 16, 2020, 87.1% completion rate); Wave 3 ( = 4,881, November 8, 2021-November 24, 2021, 75.3% completion rate); and Wave 4 ( = 4,859, May 19, 2022-June 16, 2022, 75.1% completion rate).
Benefit finding was common; k-means clustering (an exploratory, data-driven approach) yielded five trajectories: always high (15.85%), always low (18.52%), always middle (28.47%), increasing (17.79%), and decreasing (19.37%). Benefit-finding trajectories were generally not strong correlates of psychological distress and functional impairment over time. Rather, benefit finding robustly correlated with health protective behaviors relevant to COVID-19 and the seasonal flu. In covariate-adjusted models, benefit finding positively correlated with more social distancing (β = .24, < .001) and mask wearing (β = .18, < .001) at Wave 2 and greater COVID-19 (odds ratio, = 1.23, = .001) and flu ( = 1.29, < .001) vaccination at Wave 3.
Although benefit finding was not generally associated with lower psychological distress during a collective stressor, it correlated with engagement in stressor-related health protective behaviors. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
在集体压力源(如 COVID-19)期间,寻找益处等认知策略可能通过减轻痛苦或激励健康保护行为来促进应对。
我们使用在 COVID-19 时代从美国代表性、基于概率的居民样本中收集的纵向数据,探索了益处发现、集体和个体层面逆境暴露、心理困扰和健康保护行为之间的关系:第 1 波(=6514 人,2020 年 3 月 18 日至 4 月 18 日,完成率为 58.5%);第 2 波(=5661 人,2020 年 9 月 26 日至 10 月 16 日,完成率为 87.1%);第 3 波(=4881 人,2021 年 11 月 8 日至 11 月 24 日,完成率为 75.3%);第 4 波(=4859 人,2022 年 5 月 19 日至 6 月 16 日,完成率为 75.1%)。
益处发现很常见;k-均值聚类(一种探索性的、数据驱动的方法)产生了五个轨迹:始终高(15.85%)、始终低(18.52%)、始终中等(28.47%)、增加(17.79%)和减少(19.37%)。随着时间的推移,益处发现轨迹与心理困扰和功能障碍之间通常没有很强的相关性。相反,益处发现与与 COVID-19 和季节性流感相关的健康保护行为具有很强的相关性。在协变量调整模型中,益处发现与第 2 波时更多的社交距离(β=0.24, < 0.001)和口罩佩戴(β=0.18, < 0.001)以及第 3 波时 COVID-19(比值比,=1.23, < 0.001)和流感(=1.29, < 0.001)疫苗接种呈正相关。
尽管在集体压力源期间,益处发现通常与较低的心理困扰无关,但它与参与与压力源相关的健康保护行为有关。