Morale and Perceived Threats as Predictors of Psychological Coping with Distress in Pandemic and Armed Conflict Times

The present study investigated predictors of psychological coping with adversity responses during the COVID-19 pandemic and an armed conflict. Two paired samples that represented the Israeli population that was exposed to both adversities were compared. Respondents rated five different psychological...

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Main Authors: Yohanan Eshel, Shaul Kimhi, Hadas Marciano, Bruria Adini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/16/8759
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spelling doaj-636eba7bdcee4a64a6224796e83547202021-08-26T13:50:15ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1661-78271660-46012021-08-01188759875910.3390/ijerph18168759Morale and Perceived Threats as Predictors of Psychological Coping with Distress in Pandemic and Armed Conflict TimesYohanan Eshel0Shaul Kimhi1Hadas Marciano2Bruria Adini3Stress and Resilience Research Center, Tel Hai College, Tel Hai 1220800, IsraelStress and Resilience Research Center, Tel Hai College, Tel Hai 1220800, IsraelStress and Resilience Research Center, Tel Hai College, Tel Hai 1220800, IsraelDepartment of Emergency and Disaster Management, School of Public Health, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6139601, IsraelThe present study investigated predictors of psychological coping with adversity responses during the COVID-19 pandemic and an armed conflict. Two paired samples that represented the Israeli population that was exposed to both adversities were compared. Respondents rated five different psychological coping responses associated with the two adversities, such as anxiety or individual resilience. Perceived security, pandemic, economic, and political risks, as well as level of morale, were rated. Two major findings were disclosed by two path analyses. Morale improved the predictions of the varied coping responses in both the pandemic and conflict and was the best predictor of four out of five responses and the second-best predictor of the fifth response. Contrary to previous studies, our findings revealed that the concept of a single major predictor of coping responses under distress is an overgeneralization. In both cases, the coping responses were better explained by other perceived risks rather than by the risk of the investigated adversity. Rather than assume that a perceived security threat accounts for low levels of public moods, it is vital to study the antecedents of coping responses and to empirically examine additional potential predictors.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/16/8759COVID-19armed conflictmoraledistressresiliencewell-being
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yohanan Eshel
Shaul Kimhi
Hadas Marciano
Bruria Adini
spellingShingle Yohanan Eshel
Shaul Kimhi
Hadas Marciano
Bruria Adini
Morale and Perceived Threats as Predictors of Psychological Coping with Distress in Pandemic and Armed Conflict Times
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
COVID-19
armed conflict
morale
distress
resilience
well-being
author_facet Yohanan Eshel
Shaul Kimhi
Hadas Marciano
Bruria Adini
author_sort Yohanan Eshel
title Morale and Perceived Threats as Predictors of Psychological Coping with Distress in Pandemic and Armed Conflict Times
title_short Morale and Perceived Threats as Predictors of Psychological Coping with Distress in Pandemic and Armed Conflict Times
title_full Morale and Perceived Threats as Predictors of Psychological Coping with Distress in Pandemic and Armed Conflict Times
title_fullStr Morale and Perceived Threats as Predictors of Psychological Coping with Distress in Pandemic and Armed Conflict Times
title_full_unstemmed Morale and Perceived Threats as Predictors of Psychological Coping with Distress in Pandemic and Armed Conflict Times
title_sort morale and perceived threats as predictors of psychological coping with distress in pandemic and armed conflict times
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1661-7827
1660-4601
publishDate 2021-08-01
description The present study investigated predictors of psychological coping with adversity responses during the COVID-19 pandemic and an armed conflict. Two paired samples that represented the Israeli population that was exposed to both adversities were compared. Respondents rated five different psychological coping responses associated with the two adversities, such as anxiety or individual resilience. Perceived security, pandemic, economic, and political risks, as well as level of morale, were rated. Two major findings were disclosed by two path analyses. Morale improved the predictions of the varied coping responses in both the pandemic and conflict and was the best predictor of four out of five responses and the second-best predictor of the fifth response. Contrary to previous studies, our findings revealed that the concept of a single major predictor of coping responses under distress is an overgeneralization. In both cases, the coping responses were better explained by other perceived risks rather than by the risk of the investigated adversity. Rather than assume that a perceived security threat accounts for low levels of public moods, it is vital to study the antecedents of coping responses and to empirically examine additional potential predictors.
topic COVID-19
armed conflict
morale
distress
resilience
well-being
url https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/16/8759
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