Yael Albo, Eran Leck, Orly Nathan, Naama Wolf, Eran Zaidise
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COR resources manifested as: work-finance and social bonds showed both disruption and strengthening; mental health, physical health and protective habits characterized loss narratives. Gain narratives were predominantly characterized by renewed perspective and personalized time investment. Women reported more physical health impacts. Resource combinations exemplified resource caravans. 'Mixed' group revealed complex balance of loss-gain dynamics. Work-life balance emerged as a sustained valued asset. The findings align with COR theory principles.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Three years post-pandemic onset, while lasting losses persist, narratives indicate shifting dynamics toward gains, predominantly reflecting transformed perspectives. Findings enhance COR theory in pandemic context and inform policy by highlighting emotional toll management and work-life balance preservation.</p>","PeriodicalId":94107,"journal":{"name":"Journal of public health (Oxford, England)","volume":" ","pages":"637-645"},"PeriodicalIF":3.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-08-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"COR and CORONA: analysis of COVID-19's subjective lasting impact on wellbeing, employing conservation of resources theory.\",\"authors\":\"Yael Albo, Eran Leck, Orly Nathan, Naama Wolf, Eran Zaidise\",\"doi\":\"10.1093/pubmed/fdaf021\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>The COVID-19 pandemic had widespread impact, with evidence indicating lasting effects on wellbeing. This study aims to examine enduring impacts through individual narratives, using Conservation of Resources (COR) theory that serves for studying crises.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Analysis of narratives from 1148 responses to an open-ended question about pandemic's lasting effects, using qualitative and quantitative methods within COR theory framework including thematic analysis, Elastic Net Regression, word cloud visualization and sociodemographic analysis.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>About 42% of respondents reported lasting effects, with almost equal distribution between 'Loss' and 'Gain' groups, and 7% reporting mixed experiences. COR resources manifested as: work-finance and social bonds showed both disruption and strengthening; mental health, physical health and protective habits characterized loss narratives. Gain narratives were predominantly characterized by renewed perspective and personalized time investment. Women reported more physical health impacts. Resource combinations exemplified resource caravans. 'Mixed' group revealed complex balance of loss-gain dynamics. Work-life balance emerged as a sustained valued asset. The findings align with COR theory principles.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Three years post-pandemic onset, while lasting losses persist, narratives indicate shifting dynamics toward gains, predominantly reflecting transformed perspectives. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:COVID-19大流行产生了广泛影响,有证据表明对福祉产生了持久影响。本研究旨在运用资源保护理论(Conservation of Resources, COR)研究危机,透过个体叙述来检视持久的影响。方法:采用COR理论框架内的定性和定量方法,包括专题分析、弹性网络回归、词云可视化和社会人口分析,对1148个关于流行病持久影响的开放式问题的回答进行分析。结果:约42%的受访者表示影响持续,“损失”组和“获得”组之间的分布几乎相等,7%的受访者表示体验好坏参半。COR资源表现为:工作-财务和社会纽带既有中断又有加强;心理健康、身体健康和保护习惯是损失叙述的特征。获得叙事的主要特征是视角的更新和个性化的时间投入。女性报告的身体健康影响更大。资源组合就是资源商队的例子。“混合型”群体表现出复杂的得失动态平衡。工作与生活的平衡成为一种持续的有价值的资产。研究结果与COR理论原则一致。结论:大流行爆发三年后,虽然持续的损失仍然存在,但叙述表明,动态正在向收益转变,主要反映了观点的转变。研究结果加强了大流行背景下的COR理论,并通过强调情绪损失管理和保持工作与生活平衡为政策提供信息。
COR and CORONA: analysis of COVID-19's subjective lasting impact on wellbeing, employing conservation of resources theory.
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic had widespread impact, with evidence indicating lasting effects on wellbeing. This study aims to examine enduring impacts through individual narratives, using Conservation of Resources (COR) theory that serves for studying crises.
Methods: Analysis of narratives from 1148 responses to an open-ended question about pandemic's lasting effects, using qualitative and quantitative methods within COR theory framework including thematic analysis, Elastic Net Regression, word cloud visualization and sociodemographic analysis.
Results: About 42% of respondents reported lasting effects, with almost equal distribution between 'Loss' and 'Gain' groups, and 7% reporting mixed experiences. COR resources manifested as: work-finance and social bonds showed both disruption and strengthening; mental health, physical health and protective habits characterized loss narratives. Gain narratives were predominantly characterized by renewed perspective and personalized time investment. Women reported more physical health impacts. Resource combinations exemplified resource caravans. 'Mixed' group revealed complex balance of loss-gain dynamics. Work-life balance emerged as a sustained valued asset. The findings align with COR theory principles.
Conclusion: Three years post-pandemic onset, while lasting losses persist, narratives indicate shifting dynamics toward gains, predominantly reflecting transformed perspectives. Findings enhance COR theory in pandemic context and inform policy by highlighting emotional toll management and work-life balance preservation.