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Journal Article

Citation

Negri A, Barazzetti A, Rinzivillo A, Mariani R, Di Monte C. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024; 21(4).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, MDPI: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)

DOI

10.3390/ijerph21040508

PMID

38673420

PMCID

PMC11050012

Abstract

The negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health has been widely demonstrated; however, few studies have investigated the psychological processes involved in this impact, including core beliefs violation, meaning-making disruption, interpersonal support, or one's relational functioning. This study explored the mental health of 215 Italian adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent outbreak of the Russian-Ukrainian war. By administering a set of questionnaires, several cognitive and emotional variables were investigated, including core belief violation, meaning attribution to the pandemic and war, attachment, and emotion regulation, social media addiction, and relationships with significant others and teachers. We conducted some descriptive, mean difference, correlational, and predictive analyses that revealed a significant association between core belief violation caused by war and pandemic, ability to integrate war and pandemic within personal meaning universe, the relational support received, and mental health. The relationship with teachers during these challenging periods improved significantly according to the respondents' opinion, becoming both more authoritative and empathic. This study offers insights into what cognitive and relational processes are useful to intervene on to reduce the distress of adolescents who are facing significant moments of crisis due to events that challenge their cognitive and emotional balance.


Language: en

Keywords

*COVID-19/psychology/epidemiology; *Mental Health; *Students/psychology; Adolescent; Armed Conflicts/psychology; Cognition; core belief violation; COVID-19; Female; Humans; Italy/epidemiology; Male; meaning-making; pandemic resilience; Russia/epidemiology; Russian-Ukrainian war; SARS-CoV-2; Schools; Surveys and Questionnaires

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