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Journal Article

Citation

Luce C, Leytham Powell T, Kim Y. Am. Behav. Sci. 2022; 66(7): 881-893.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/00027642211013406

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Research has shown a positive relationship between exposure to natural disasters and common disaster-related mental health disorders. However, much more can be done to fully examine how protective factors such as perceived social support or active coping strategies are related to mental health in the context of natural disasters. This study seeks to examine the relationship between mental disorders and active coping. The article also explores the moderating effect of perceived social support on mental health. Data were collected in August 2016 as part of a longitudinal study on mental health and psychosocial intervention in post-earthquake Nepal (n = 660). Our independent variables in this study were anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress symptoms. The dependent variable was active coping. Perceived social support was tested as a potential moderating variable. Ordinary least squares regression analyses were run to examine the relationships between the three mental disorders and active coping. We also tested the moderating effect of perceived social support on the relationships between the three mental disorders and active coping. Ordinary least square analyses found a statistically significant negative relationship between active coping and anxiety (B = −0.137, p <.001), depression (B = −0.116, p <.001), and posttraumatic stress symptoms (B = −0.065, p =.337), controlling for other factors. Perceived social support significantly moderated the associations between active coping and each mental disorder: anxiety (B = 0.012, p <.05), depression (B = 0.017, p <.05), and posttraumatic stress symptoms (B = 0.064, p <.05). Our findings suggest that perceived social support moderates the relationship between common mental disorders and active coping in Nepali earthquake survivors.


Language: en

Keywords

active coping; mental health; natural disasters; perceived social support

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