Author:
Wang Grace,Fram Noah R.,Carstensen Laura L.,Berger Jonathan
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has devastated the economic and social wellbeing of communities worldwide. Certain groups have been disproportionately impacted by the strain of the pandemic, such as classical musicians. The COVID-19 pandemic has greatly harmed the classical music industry, silencing the world's concert halls and theaters. In an industry characterized by instability, a shock as great as COVID-19 may bring negative effects that far outlast the pandemic itself. This study investigates the wellbeing of classical musicians during the COVID-19 pandemic. 68 professional classical musicians completed a questionnaire composed of validated measures of future time horizons, emotional experience, social relationships, and life satisfaction. Findings show that feelings of loneliness had a significant negative association with other measures of wellbeing and were significantly mediated by increased social integration and perceived social support from colleagues, friends, and family. These findings help to characterize the present psychological, emotional, and social wellness of classical musicians in the United States, the first step toward mitigating the hazardous impacts of COVID-19 on this vulnerable group's mental health and wellness.
Reference72 articles.
1. AJMC2021
2. AlldayE.
Bay Area Orders “Shelter in Place,” Only Essential Businesses Open in 6 Counties. San Francisco Chronicle2020
3. Social networks in adult life and a preliminary examination of the convoy model;Antonucci;J. Gerontol.,1987
4. Resounding meaning: a PERMA wellbeing profile of classical musicians;Ascenso;Front. Psychol.,2018
5. With a little help from our friends: social support as a source of well-being and of coping with stress;Bailey;J. Sociol.,1994
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献