Resilience and Coping as Moderators of Stress-Related Growth in Asians and AAPIs During COVID-19

S. D. A. Litam, Seungbin Oh, Catherine Y. Chang
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

This exploratory study examined the extent to which coping, resilience, experiences of subtle and blatant racism, and ethnic identity predicted stress-related growth in a national convenience sample of Asians and Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs; N = 326) who experienced COVID-19–related racial discrimination. Our analysis indicated participants with higher levels of coping, resilience, experiences of subtle and blatant racism, and ethnic identity were significantly more likely to cultivate higher levels of stress-related growth. Coping strategies such as self-blame, religion, humor, venting, substance use, denial, and behavioral disengagement significantly moderated the relationship between experiences of racism and stress-related growth. Notably, participants in the study who used mental health services following COVID-19 reported significantly higher levels of racial discrimination, resilience, coping, and stress-related growth compared to Asians and AAPIs who did not use professional mental health services. Mental health professionals are called to utilize culturally sensitive treatment modalities and challenge traditional Western notions that frame coping responses from an individualistic worldview.
韧性和应对:亚洲和亚太地区在COVID-19期间压力相关增长的调节因素
这项探索性研究考察了应对、恢复力、微妙和公然的种族主义经历和种族认同在多大程度上预测了亚洲人、亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民(AAPIs;N = 326),他们经历了与covid -19相关的种族歧视。我们的分析表明,应对能力、适应力、微妙和公然的种族主义经历以及种族认同水平较高的参与者,更有可能培养出更高水平的压力相关成长。自责、宗教、幽默、发泄、物质使用、否认和行为脱离等应对策略显著地缓和了种族主义经历与压力相关成长之间的关系。值得注意的是,与没有使用专业心理健康服务的亚洲人和亚太裔相比,在COVID-19后使用心理健康服务的研究参与者报告的种族歧视、适应力、应对和压力相关增长水平明显更高。精神卫生专业人员被要求利用文化敏感的治疗方式,并挑战传统的西方观念,这些观念从个人主义的世界观中构建应对反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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