Coping, connection appraisal, and well-being during COVID-19 in the U.S., Japan, and Mexico.

Front Psychol

Department of Psychology, Haverford College, Haverford, PA, United States.

Published: August 2024

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected nearly every facet of life, constituting a "new normal" and prompting an ongoing collective psychological crisis. People's ways of coping with the pandemic and corresponding well-being are of particular research interest; however, these constructs have largely been examined using deductive quantitative approaches, deficit-based lenses, and mononational samples.

Methods: The current mixed-methods study used inductive-sequential (QUAL → QUAN) approaches to explore positive coping strategies (approach coping style and COVID-related connection appraisal) and well-being (loneliness, distress, and happiness) across individuals from the United States, Japan, and Mexico. Qualitative data were gathered from  = 141 U.S., Japanese, and Mexican adults to examine how people perceived connection during the pandemic.

Results: Qualitative analyses illuminated common themes in which people appraised the pandemic as an opportunity for connection and strengthened interpersonal relationships. Quantitative measures, including a newly-developed questionnaire on COVID-related connection appraisal, were then administered to a separate sample of  = 302 adults in the U.S, Japan, and Mexico to assess associations among approach coping style, COVID-related connection appraisal, and well-being outcomes (loneliness, distress, happiness). Quantitative analyses found significant associations among approach coping style, COVID-related connection appraisal, and all well-being outcomes. Of note, these associations did not differ by country. COVID-related connection appraisal mediated the relationship between approach coping style and two well-being outcomes (loneliness and happiness).

Discussion: Findings point to approach coping style and connection appraisal as pathways for resilience and growth in the face of global suffering.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11394185PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1420327DOI Listing

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