A full‐scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022: Resilience and coping within and beyond Ukraine

Author:

Kimhi Shaul12,Kaim Arielle134,Bankauskaite Dalia5,Baran Maria6,Baran Tomasz7,Eshel Yohannan28,Dumbadze Salome9,Gabashvili Manana9,Kaniasty Krzysztof1011ORCID,Koubova Alice12,Marciano Hadas213,Matkeviciene Renata5,Teperik Dmitri14,Adini Bruria13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ResWell Research Collaboration Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

2. Stress and Resilience Research Center Tel‐Hai College Tel‐Hai Israel

3. Department of Emergency and Disaster Management, School of Public Health, Sackler Faculty of Medicine Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

4. Israel National Center for Trauma & Emergency Medicine Research The Gertner Institute for Epidemiology and Health Policy Research, Sheba Medical Center Ramat‐Gan Israel

5. Faculty of Communication Vilnius University Vilnius Lithuania

6. Faculty of Psychology SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities Warsaw Poland

7. Faculty of Psychology University of Warsaw Warsaw Poland

8. Psychology Department University of Haifa Haifa Israel

9. Applied Psychology, School of Social Sciences Georgian Institute of Public Affairs Tbilisi Georgia

10. Department of Psychology Indiana University of Pennsylvania Indiana Pennsylvania USA

11. Institute of Psychology Polish Academy of Sciences Warsaw Poland

12. Institute of Philosophy Czech Academy of Sciences Prague Czech Republic

13. The Institute of Information Processing and Decision Making University of Haifa Haifa Israel

14. International Center for Defense and Security Tallinn Estonia

Abstract

AbstractThe study examined the resilience and coping of samples from Ukraine and five nearby countries during the war in Ukraine. The research focused on (1) the levels of community and societal resilience of the Ukrainian respondents compared with the populations of five nearby European countries and (2) commonalities and diversities concerning coping indicators (hope, well‐being, perceived threats, distress symptoms, and sense of danger) across the examined countries. A cross‐sectional study was conducted, based on data collection through Internet panel samples, representing the six countries' adult populations. Ukrainian respondents reported the highest levels of community and societal resilience, hope, and distress symptoms and the lowest level of well‐being, compared to the population of the five nearby European countries. Hope was the best predictor of community and societal resilience in all countries. Positive coping variables, most notably hope, but also perceived well‐being are instrumental in building resilience. While building resilience on a societal level is a complex, multifaceted task, various dimensions must be considered when planning actions to support these states. It is essential to monitor the levels of resilience, during and following the resolution of the crisis, both in Ukraine and in the neighboring countries.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Applied Psychology

Reference52 articles.

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