Psychological Resilience Factors and Their Association With Weekly Stressor Reactivity During the COVID-19 Outbreak in Europe: Prospective Longitudinal Study

Open Access
Authors
  • S.A. Bögemann
  • L.M.C. Puhlmann
  • C. Wackerhagen
  • M. Zerban
  • A. Riepenhausen
  • G. Köber
  • K.S.L. Yuen
  • S. Pooseh
  • M.A. Marciniak
  • Z. Reppmann
  • A. Uściƚko
  • J. Weermeijer
  • D.B. Lenferink
  • J. Mituniewicz
  • N. Robak
  • N.C. Donner
  • M. Mestdagh
  • S. Verdonck
  • R. van Dick
  • B. Kleim
  • K. Lieb
  • J.M.C. van Leeuwen
  • D. Kobylińska
  • I. Myin-Germeys
  • H. Walter
  • O. Tüscher
  • E.J. Hermans
  • I.M. Veer ORCID logo
  • R. Kalisch
Publication date 2023
Journal JMIR Mental Health
Article number e46518
Volume | Issue number 10
Number of pages 17
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Background: Cross-sectional relationships between psychosocial resilience factors (RFs) and resilience, operationalized as the outcome of low mental health reactivity to stressor exposure (low “stressor reactivity” [SR]), were reported during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
Objective: Extending these findings, we here examined prospective relationships and weekly dynamics between the same RFs and SR in a longitudinal sample during the aftermath of the first wave in several European countries. 
Methods: Over 5 weeks of app-based assessments, participants reported weekly stressor exposure, mental health problems, RFs, and demographic data in 1 of 6 different languages. As (partly) preregistered, hypotheses were tested cross-sectionally at baseline (N=558), and longitudinally (n=200), using mixed effects models and mediation analyses.
Results: RFs at baseline, including positive appraisal style (PAS), optimism (OPT), general self-efficacy (GSE), perceived good stress recovery (REC), and perceived social support (PSS), were negatively associated with SR scores, not only cross-sectionally(baseline SR scores; all P<.001) but also prospectively (average SR scores across subsequent weeks; positive appraisal (PA),P=.008; OPT, P<.001; GSE, P=.01; REC, P<.001; and PSS, P=.002). In both associations, PAS mediated the effects of PSS on SR (cross-sectionally: 95% CI –0.064 to –0.013; prospectively: 95% CI –0.074 to –0.0008). In the analyses of weekly RF-SR dynamics, the RFs PA of stressors generally and specifically related to the COVID-19 pandemic, and GSE were negatively associated with SR in a contemporaneous fashion (PA, P<.001; PAC,P=.03; and GSE, P<.001), but not in a lagged fashion (PA,P=.36; PAC, P=.52; and GSE, P=.06).
Conclusions: We identified psychological RFs that prospectively predict resilience and cofluctuate with weekly SR within individuals. These prospective results endorse that the previously reported RF-SR associations do not exclusively reflect mood congruency or other temporal bias effects. We further confirm the important role of PA in resilience.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.2196/46518
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85169089486
Downloads
mental-2023-1-e46518 (Final published version)
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