4.4 Article

Demoralization during the Italian quarantine due to 2019 coronavirus disease pandemic: prevalence and association with psychological well-being and coping strategies

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PSYCHOLOGY HEALTH & MEDICINE
卷 28, 期 2, 页码 517-528

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ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13548506.2022.2113104

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COVID-19; quarantine; demoralization; psychological well-being; coping strategies; pandemic

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This study aims to investigate demoralization among Italian citizens during the COVID-19 quarantine and explore its associations with psychological well-being, coping strategies, socio-demographic characteristics, and COVID-19-related factors. The findings suggest that demoralization is associated with depressed mood, general health, coping strategies, and certain socio-demographic characteristics. Specifically, females, older individuals without children, and those not working during quarantine reported higher levels of demoralization.
The aims of the study were to investigate demoralization in a sample of Italian citizens during the Italian quarantine due to COVID-19 pandemic and to explore its associations with psychological well-being, coping strategies, participants' socio-demographic characteristics and COVID-19-related factors. Italian citizens aged over 18 and quarantined in Italy were recruited. A cross-sectional online survey was launched through a snow-ball sampling and 1123 surveys were collected. Participants answered ad hoc questions and completed the Psychological General Well-Being Index, the Demoralization Scale, and the Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced-New Italian Version. Disheartenment, dysphoria, and sense of failure were the subdimensions of demoralization with higher scores. Demoralization was associated with depressed mood, positive well-being, self-control, general health, vitality, problem-solving, and avoidance and religious coping strategies. Individuals who were female, older, without children and not working during quarantine had higher demoralization. Quarantine-related changes can elicit demoralization that is associated to lower psychological well-being. Problem-solving and religious coping can protect against demoralization, while avoidant coping strategies can exacerbate it. Assessing and treating demoralization, especially in the categories of citizens most at risk of developing it, could be useful to provide adequate care against COVID-19-related distress.

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