{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Adaptive and maladaptive pathways of COVID-19 worry on well-being: A cross-national study. {Author}: Mancini AD;Chapman C;Kadir A;Model Z;Prati G; {Journal}: Scand J Psychol {Volume}: 0 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Jun 25 {Factor}: 2.312 {DOI}: 10.1111/sjop.13049 {Abstract}: OBJECTIVE: In a preregistered study, we examined whether worries about COVID-19 are simultaneously linked with enhanced well-being through social interaction and with reduced well-being through depression symptoms.
METHODS: In August 2020, census-matched participants from high- and low-prevalence regions in the United States and Italy (N = 857) completed assessments of COVID-19 worry, social interaction, depression symptoms, and well-being.
RESULTS: Worries about COVID-19 predicted both more social interaction and more depression (ps < 0.001). In multiple mediational analyses, an adaptive pathway of COVID-19 worry through social interaction was associated with higher well-being, whereas a maladaptive pathway through depression symptoms was associated with lower well-being. Further, a comparison of high and low COVID-19 prevalence regions replicated the mediational findings for social interaction, providing evidence against reverse causation and common method variance.
CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that normative worries about acute stressors may both benefit and undermine well-being, depending on their impact on social behavior or depression symptoms.