4.7 Article

The impact of resilience on the mental health of military personnel during the COVID-19 pandemic: coping styles and regulatory focus

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1240047

Keywords

military personnel; mental health; resilience; coping style; regulatory focus; COVID-19

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This study examines the relationship between resilience, coping styles, regulatory focus, and mental health among military personnel during the COVID-19 lockdown. The results suggest that resilience negatively impacts psychological symptoms, while mature and mixed coping styles mediate the association between resilience and psychological symptoms. Regulatory focus predominance has a negative moderating effect on the effects of mature coping styles on psychological symptoms.
Military personnel encountered multiple stressful events during the COVID-19 lockdown. Reducing non-combat attrition due to mental disorders is crucial for military morale and combat effectiveness. Grounded in stress theory and regulatory focus theory, this study investigates the influence of resilience on military personnel's mental health; coping style and regulatory focus are considered potential mediators and moderators, respectively. We conducted a routine psychological assessment on 1,110 military personnel in China. The results indicate that: (1) resilience has a negative impact on the psychological symptoms of military groups; (2) mature and mixed coping styles in military personnel mediate the association between resilience and psychological symptoms; and (3) regulatory focus predominance has a negative moderating effect on mature coping styles' effects on psychological symptoms. Furthermore, this study supports previous findings that resilience and mental health are interrelated; it demonstrates that military personnel can effectively reduce negative psychological symptoms by improving their resilience level and adopting mature coping styles under stressful situations. The current study presents interventional insights regarding coping styles and mental health from a self-regulatory perspective during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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