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Prediction of individual, community and societal resilience in the Czech Republic compared to Slovakia during the war in Ukraine
A. Koubová, S. Kimhi
Language English Country England, Great Britain
Document type Journal Article
Grant support
LX22NPO5101
European Union - Next Generation EU (Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports, NPO: EXCELES)
NLK
BioMedCentral
from 2001-12-01
BioMedCentral Open Access
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Directory of Open Access Journals
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Free Medical Journals
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PubMed Central
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Europe PubMed Central
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ProQuest Central
from 2009-01-01
Open Access Digital Library
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Open Access Digital Library
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Medline Complete (EBSCOhost)
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Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
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Public Health Database (ProQuest)
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ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
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Springer Nature OA/Free Journals
from 2001-12-01
- MeSH
- Coping Skills MeSH
- Adult MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Resilience, Psychological * MeSH
- Check Tag
- Adult MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Geographicals
- Czech Republic MeSH
- Slovakia MeSH
- Ukraine MeSH
The present study examines, as research questions, which and to what extent psychological and demographic variables significantly predict individual, community, and societal resilience among a sample of Czech Republic adults (N = 1,100) six months after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The research tools included the following scales: Societal, community, and individual resilience; hope, well-being; morale; distress symptoms; a sense of danger; and perceived threats. The results indicated the following: (a) Correlation analysis shows that resilience is significantly and positively correlated with supporting coping factors and significantly and negatively correlated with suppressing coping factors. (b) A comparison of supporting coping indicators (hope, well-being, and morale) and suppressing coping indicators (distress symptoms, sense of danger, and perceived threats) in the Czech Republic with those variables in Slovakia and Israel indicated that Israel reported higher resilience, higher supporting coping indicators, and lower suppressing coping factors. Three-path analysis among the Czech sample indicated that the best predictor of SR was the level of hope, the best predictor of CR was morale, and the best predictor of IR was the sense of danger. In an attempt to explain these findings in the discussion section, we refer to the background of Czech society and a possible connection to the findings.
Institute of Philosophy Czech Academy of Sciences Prague Czech Republic
Sackler Faculty of Medicine Israel School of Public Health Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel
References provided by Crossref.org
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- $a The present study examines, as research questions, which and to what extent psychological and demographic variables significantly predict individual, community, and societal resilience among a sample of Czech Republic adults (N = 1,100) six months after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The research tools included the following scales: Societal, community, and individual resilience; hope, well-being; morale; distress symptoms; a sense of danger; and perceived threats. The results indicated the following: (a) Correlation analysis shows that resilience is significantly and positively correlated with supporting coping factors and significantly and negatively correlated with suppressing coping factors. (b) A comparison of supporting coping indicators (hope, well-being, and morale) and suppressing coping indicators (distress symptoms, sense of danger, and perceived threats) in the Czech Republic with those variables in Slovakia and Israel indicated that Israel reported higher resilience, higher supporting coping indicators, and lower suppressing coping factors. Three-path analysis among the Czech sample indicated that the best predictor of SR was the level of hope, the best predictor of CR was morale, and the best predictor of IR was the sense of danger. In an attempt to explain these findings in the discussion section, we refer to the background of Czech society and a possible connection to the findings.
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