期刊
JOURNAL OF COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGY
卷 69, 期 5, 页码 732-744出版社
AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/cou0000626
关键词
mindfulness; rumination; COVID-19 stress; depression; longitudinal study
资金
- Augsburg University Undergraduate Research and Graduate Opportunity Grant
This study explores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on young adults and the role of mindfulness in mitigating the negative psychological consequences of stress. The findings suggest that mindfulness can disrupt maladaptive responses to stress and potentially help individuals manage stress during the pandemic.
Public Significance Statement This study advances the understanding of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on young adults and the role that mindfulness plays in disrupting maladaptive responses to stress (i.e., rumination) that lead to negative psychological consequences (i.e., depression). This research underscores the promise of mindfulness as a potential target for interventions aimed to help individuals manage stress during the COVID-19 pandemic. The COVID-19 pandemic has not only accounted for a substantial number of deaths in the United States but also deleterious mental health outcomes. We integrated multiple lines of previous research to better understand psychological strengths and difficulties in the face of the pandemic by testing a moderated mediation model that posited that rumination mediates the relationship between COVID-related stress and depression, and mindfulness moderates the relationship between COVID-related stress and rumination. The participants were 196 young adults (79.6% female, 53.1% persons of color), who ranged in age between 18 and 33 years (M = 21.21; SD = 3.62). The participants completed measures of COVID-19 stress, rumination, mindfulness, and depressive symptoms at four time points spanning 1 month. Cross-sectional moderated mediation analysis of the data showed that COVID-related stress predicted rumination, which in turn, predicted depressive symptoms. In addition, mindfulness buffered the relationship between COVID-related stress and rumination. Later, we ran exploratory analyses to examine the robustness of the main models at each wave, linear mixed-effects models to investigate change over time, and conducted a cross-lagged model to test for directional effects. Notably, the longitudinal findings suggested that COVID-related stress and rumination tended to decrease over time and mindfulness remained temporally stable. Additionally, increases in rumination predicted increases in depression. Some longitudinal findings did not consistently congrue with cross-sectional results. Overall, the findings highlight the diverse ways in which individuals cope with stress and the promise of mindfulness as a protective factor against the negative effects of pandemic-related stressors.
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