Author: Landmann, Helen; Rohmann, Anette
Title: Groupâ€specific contact and sense of connectedness during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic and its associations with psychological wellâ€being, perceived stress, and workâ€life balance Cord-id: 03ke0umu Document date: 2021_8_2
ID: 03ke0umu
Snippet: Theories of social cure, sense of community, and social identity suggest that feelings of connectedness affect how we have coped with the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. Although people can feel connected to a variety of different groups, such as their family, friends, coâ€workers, neighbours, nation, or all humanity, previous research has focused on connectedness to only a subset of these groups. To examine the relative importance of connectedness to and contact with specific groups for wellâ€being, str
Document: Theories of social cure, sense of community, and social identity suggest that feelings of connectedness affect how we have coped with the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. Although people can feel connected to a variety of different groups, such as their family, friends, coâ€workers, neighbours, nation, or all humanity, previous research has focused on connectedness to only a subset of these groups. To examine the relative importance of connectedness to and contact with specific groups for wellâ€being, stress, and workâ€life balance during the pandemic, we conducted a longitudinal experience sampling study (N = 578) during the first 8 weeks of the Spring 2020 COVIDâ€19 lockdown in Germany. Feeling connected to family members most strongly predicted psychological wellâ€being (positively) and perceived stress (negatively) during the lockdown, followed by a sense of connectedness with friends and neighbours. Sense of connectedness to other groups did not predict wellâ€being, stress, or workâ€life balance when controlling for the respective other groups. Hence, it not only matters whether or not a person feels connected to a group but also to which specific group he or she feels connected.
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