Brik Anis Ben, Wang Yunqi
College of Public Policy, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Ar-Rayyan, Qatar.
Department of Child, Youth and Family Studies, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA.
Fam Process. 2025 Mar;64(1):e13063. doi: 10.1111/famp.13063. Epub 2024 Sep 27.
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the mental health and well-being of families worldwide, with parents particularly at risk for stress and other psychological symptoms. In this study, we sought to understand the factors contributing to parent stress symptoms during the early stages of the pandemic in 23 European countries (N = 40,138) using the double ABC-X model. We examined whether the relationship between stressor pile-up and perceived stress was mediated by family satisfaction and relationship satisfaction and whether family resiliency beliefs impacted these mediated relationships. Our results showed a direct association between stressor pile-up and parent stress symptoms, but we did not find evidence for the mediating role of family satisfaction or relationship satisfaction in this relationship. We also found that family resiliency beliefs did not moderate the indirect effects of family satisfaction and relationship satisfaction on parent stress symptoms. These findings suggest that the ABC-X model may not fully capture the processes affecting parents' experience of stress during the pandemic and that alternative models such as the vulnerability-stress-adaptation model may be more relevant. Future research should also consider the potential negative impact of resiliency beliefs on mental health and other risk and protective factors such as self-compassion.
新冠疫情对全球家庭的心理健康和幸福产生了重大影响,父母尤其面临压力及其他心理症状的风险。在本研究中,我们试图运用双重ABC-X模型,了解在23个欧洲国家(N = 40138)疫情早期导致父母压力症状的因素。我们考察了压力源堆积与感知压力之间的关系是否由家庭满意度和关系满意度介导,以及家庭复原力信念是否影响这些介导关系。我们的结果显示压力源堆积与父母压力症状之间存在直接关联,但我们没有找到证据证明家庭满意度或关系满意度在此关系中起中介作用。我们还发现,家庭复原力信念并未调节家庭满意度和关系满意度对父母压力症状的间接影响。这些发现表明,ABC-X模型可能无法完全捕捉疫情期间影响父母压力体验的过程,而诸如脆弱性-压力-适应模型等替代模型可能更适用。未来的研究还应考虑复原力信念对心理健康的潜在负面影响,以及其他风险和保护因素,如自我同情。