Background
Perceived meaning in life and social support predict resilience to numerous traumas and fluctuate as often as daily1, yet this is not adequately accounted for in the largely cross-sectional research on chronic stress and trauma2. Stress from pandemics and natural hazards differs, but has not been as extensively researched. International students in the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic face additional stressors3 such as deportation and discrimination against Asians; thus, they merit attention regarding the psychological effects COVID-19.
Hypotheses/research questions
For international students during the COVID-19 pandemic, between- and within-person increased meaning-making, social support, and self-efficacy will (1) decrease traumatic stress, anxiety, and depression and (2) increase resilience.
Sample characteristics and sample size
International students (N = 52) at a U.S. university, were surveyed weekly for > 700 data points total (data collection ongoing). Two-thirds (69%) were Asian.
Design
The design was time series with up to 14 data points per person 2-11 days apart. Within- and between-person effects were examined using multilevel modeling.
Results
Data after 8 timepoints (reported here) showed weekly perceived meaning in life predicted between-person lower distress (totaled traumatic stress, depression, and anxiety) and greater resilience. Meaning also predicted within-person lower distress, i.e. distress was lower the weeks that meaning in life was higher. Emotional social support predicted lower within-person distress and greater within-person resilience, with no between-person effects. Surprisingly, self-efficacy predicted greater within-person distress. With half the data collected, 27% of the fixed variance was accounted for.
Scientific Contribution
Our finding of largely within-person, not between-person, effects of social support and meaning in life on resilience and distress suggest that resilience during a pandemic is not static or trait-like; it fluctuates. It is never too late in the ongoing pandemic to enhance social support and meaning, even for individuals facing added stressors.