Selected article for: "fatalism superstition and self efficacy"

Author: Jane M Lim; Zaw Myo Tun; Vishakha Kumar; Sharon Quaye; Vittoria Offeddu; Alex R Cook; May Oo Lwin; Shaohai Jiang; Clarence C Tam
Title: Population anxiety and positive behaviour change during the COVID-19 epidemic: Cross-sectional surveys in Singapore, China and Italy
  • Document date: 2020_4_17
  • ID: 7yucn30u_56
    Snippet: Greater self-efficacy was associated with reduced anxiety, while higher superstition and fatalism scores were associated with higher levels of anxiety in Singapore and Italy. Previous studies show that fear and anxiety during a pandemic can be mitigated by self-efficacy 6 and information sufficiency, while tendencies towards fatalism reduce self-efficacy and increase anxiety......
    Document: Greater self-efficacy was associated with reduced anxiety, while higher superstition and fatalism scores were associated with higher levels of anxiety in Singapore and Italy. Previous studies show that fear and anxiety during a pandemic can be mitigated by self-efficacy 6 and information sufficiency, while tendencies towards fatalism reduce self-efficacy and increase anxiety.

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