Coping strategies and belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories
Coping strategies and belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories
StatusPost-Print
Alternative title
Authors
Molenda, Zuzanna
Marchlewska, Marta
Karakula, Adam
Szczepańska, Dagmara
Rogoza, Marta
Green, Ricky
Cisłak-Wójcik, Aleksandra
Douglas, Karen M.
Monograph
Monograph (alternative title)
Date
2024-01
Publisher
Journal title
British Journal of Social Psychology
Issue
1
Volume
63
Pages
Pages
319-339
ISSN
0144-6665
ISSN of series
Access date
2024-08-03
Abstract PL
Abstract EN
Conspiracy beliefs have been related to aversive emotional experiences often accompanying major world events and have also been linked to maladaptive ways of coping with stress. In this research, we examined how different coping strategies (i.e. self-sufficient, social-support, avoidance and religious) predicted the adoption of COVID-19 conspiracy theories. In two studies (Study 1, n = 1000 and Study 2, n = 616) conducted among Polish participants, we found that avoidance and religious coping were positively linked to COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs. In Study 1, conspiracy beliefs also mediated the positive relationships between avoidance and religious coping and adherence to safety and self-isolation guidelines during the COVID-19 pandemic. Study 2 additionally showed that the relationship between fear, induced by reading threatening news on COVID-19, and conspiracy beliefs was the strongest among those high in avoidance coping. These studies highlight the role of coping strategies in the adoption of COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs.
Abstract other
Keywords PL
Keywords EN
COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs
avoidance coping
coping strategies
religious coping
avoidance coping
coping strategies
religious coping
Keywords other
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Znaczenie procesów regulacji emocji i radzenia sobie ze stresem w kształtowaniu się wiary w teorie spiskowe