Review of International Studies on Human Behavior During a Pandemic
https://doi.org/10.26105/SSPU.2022.80.5.016
Abstract
The purpose of our article was to analyze the publications of foreign researchers devoted to social phenomena during the Covid-19 pandemic. Most of the research is based on the use of online surveys, standardized methods for various population groups. The research samples are diverse: random; students (as the most accessible group); medical professionals (as a risk group); police officers; parents; spouses; specific risk groups (smokers and alcohol and drug addicts). Geographical coverage: European countries (Great Britain, Austria, Spain), USA, China, Brazil, Israel.
About the Authors
A. V. MaltsevRussian Federation
Maltsev Aleksey Vladimirovich — PhD (Biological Sciences), Associate Professor, Associate Professor of the Department of General and Social Psychology
A. A. Lyubyakin
Russian Federation
Lyubyakin Anatoly Alexandrovich — PhD (Philosophy Sciences), Associate Professor, Associate Professor of the Department of General and Social Psychology
T. I. Kasyanova
Russian Federation
Tatjana I. Kasyanova — PhD (Pedagogical Sciences), Associate Professor, Chair of Theory, Methodology and Legal Support of State and Municipal Administration
S. A. Chalikov
Russian Federation
Chalikov Sergey Andreevich — Graduate Student, Department of Psychology
References
1. Aguilar L., Vicente-H ernández B., Remón-Gallo D., García-Ullán L., Valriberas-H errero I., Maciá-Casas A., Pérez-M adruga A., Garzón MÁ, Álvarez-Navares A., Roncero C. A real-world ten-week follow-up of the COVID outbreak in an outpatient drug clinic in Salamanca (Spain) // Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment. 2021. Vol. 125. No. 108303. Pp. 772–810.
2. Aiello L. M., Quercia D., Zhou K., Constantinides M., Šćepanović S., Joglekar S. How epidemic psychology works on Twitter: evolution of responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. // Humanities and Social Sciences Communications. 2021. Vol. 8. No. 179.
3. Al-Amad S. H., Hussein A. Anxiety among dental professionals and its association with their dependency on social media for health information: insights from the COVID-19 pandemic // BMC Psychology. 2021. Vol. 9 No. 9.
4. Blustein D. L., Guarino P. A. Work and Unemployment in the Time of COVID-19: The Existential Experience of Loss and Fear // Journal of Humanistic Psychology. 2020. Vol. 60. Issue 5. Pp. 702–709.
5. Boykin K., Brown M., Macchione A. L., Drea K. M., Sacco D. F. Noncompliance with Masking as a Coalitional Signal to US Conservatives in a Pandemic // Evolutionary Psychological Science. 2021. Vol. 7. Pp. 232–238.
6. Bzdok D., Dunbar R. I. M. The Neurobiology of Social Distance // Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 2020. Vol. 24. Issue 9. Pp. 717–733.
7. Cachón-Zagalaz J., Sánchez-Zafra M., Sanabrias-Moreno, D., González-Valero G., Lara-Sánchez A. J., Zagalaz-Sánchez M. L. Systematic Review of the Literature About the Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Lives of School Children // Frontiers in Psychology. 2020. Vol. 11. No. 569348.
8. Ferreira H. G. Gender differences in mental health and beliefs about Covid-19 among elderly internet users // Paideia. 2021. Vol. 31. No. e3110.
9. Grandey A. A., Sayre G. M., French K. A. «A blessing and a curse»: Work loss during coronavirus lockdown on short-term health changes via threat and recovery // Journal of occupational health psychology. 2021. Vol. 26. No. 4. Pp. 261–275.
10. Gualda E., Krouwel A., Palacios-Gálvez M., Morales-Marente E., Rodríguez-P ascual I., García-Navarro E. B. Social Distancing and COVID-19: Factors Associated With Compliance With Social Distancing Norms in Spain // Frontiers in Psychology. 2021. Vol. 12. No. 727225.
11. Kuznar L. A. A tale of two pandemics: evolutionary psychology, urbanism, and the biology of disease spread deepen sociopolitical divides in the U.S. // Humanities and Social Sciences Communications. 2021. Vol. 8. No. 42.
12. Lantos D., Molenberghs P. The neuroscience of intergroup threat and violence // Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews. 2021. Vol. 131. Рp. 77–87.
13. Lim A. J., Javadpour S. Into the Unknown: Uncertainty and Procrastination in Students From a Life History Perspective // Frontiers in Psychology. 2021. Vol. 12 No. 717380. Pp. 317–328.
14. Lívea D. G., Raquel F., Roberta M. I., Fabiana M. V., Fernando E. P.-N. The psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in remote learning in higher education // Education Sciences. 2021. Vol. 11. Issue 9. No. 473.
15. Loades M. E., Chatburn E., Higson-Sweeney N., Reynolds S., Shafran R., Brigden A., Linney C., McManus M. N., Borwick C., Crawley E. Rapid Systematic Review: The Impact of Social Isolation and Loneliness on the Mental Health of Children and Adolescents in the Context of COVID-19 // Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. 2020. Vol. 59. Issue 11. Pp. 1218–1239.
16. Martínez Arriaga R. J., González Ramírez L. P., de la Roca-Chiapas J. M., Hernández-González M. Psychological distress of COVID-19 pandemic and associated psychosocial factors among Mexican students: An exploratory study // Psychology in the Schools. 2021. 58. No. 9. Pp. 1844–1857.
17. Morawa E., Schug C., Geiser F., Beschoner P., Jerg-Bretzke L., Albus C., Weidner K., Hiebel N., Borho A., Erim Y. Psychosocial burden and working conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany: The VOICE survey among 3678 health care workers in hospitals // Journal of Psychosomatic Research. 2021. Vol. 144. No. 110415.
18. Papp L. M., Kouros C. D. Effect of COVID-19 disruptions on young adults’ affect and substance use in daily life // Psychology of Addictive Behaviors. 2021. Vol. 35. No. 4. Pp.391–401.
19. Pieh C., Budimir S., Probst T. The effect of age, gender, income, work, and physical activity on mental health during coronavirus disease (COVID-19) lockdown in Austria // Journal of Psychosomatic Research. 2020. Vol. 136, No. 110186.
20. Ren Y., Qian W., Li Z., Liu Z., Zhou Y., Wang R., Qi L., Yang J., Song X., Zeng L., Zhang X. Public mental health under the long-term influence of COVID-19 in China: Geographical and temporal distribution // Journal of Affective Disorders. 2020. Vol. 277. Pp. 893–900.
21. Rodriguez L. M., Litt D. M., Stewart S. H. COVID-19 psychological and financial stress and their links to drinking: A dyadic analysis in romantic couples // Psychology of Addictive Behaviors. 2021. Vol. 35 Issue 4. Pp. 377–390.
22. Sawaia B. B., Albuquerque R., Busarello F. R. The pandemic isolation paradox according to the indigenous people satere-mawe/am // Psicologia e Sociedade. 2020. Vol. 32. No. e020010. Pp. 31–39.
23. Spicksley K., Kington A., Watkins M. “We Will Appreciate Each Other More After This”: Teachers’ Construction of Collective and Personal Identities During Lockdown // Frontiers in Psychology. 2021. Vol. 12 No. 703404. Pp. 34–48.
24. Steinbach A. L., Kautz J., Korsgaard M. A. Caring for their own: How firm actions to protect essential workers and CEO benevolence influenced stakeholder sentiment during the COVID-19 pandemic // Journal of Applied Psychology. 2021. Vol. 106. Iss. 6. Pp. 811–824.
25. Strong P. Epidemic psychology: a model // Sociology of Health, Illness. 1990. Vol. 12. Iss. 3. P. 249–259.
26. Vujanovic A. A., Lebeaut A., Leonard S. Exploring the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of first responders // Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. 2021. Vol. 50. No. 4. Pp. 320–335.
27. Weerakoon S. M., Jetelina K. K., Knell G. Longer time spent at home during COVID-19 pandemic is associated with binge drinking among US adults // American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse. 2021. Vol. 47. No.1. Pp. 98–106. (In English).
28. Wolf J. P., Freisthler B., Chadwick C. Stress, alcohol use, and punitive parenting during the COVID-19 pandemic // Child Abuse and Neglect. 2021. Vol. 117. No. 105090. Pp. 27–49.
29. Zakeri M. A., Maazallahi M., Ehsani V., Dehghan M. Iranian psychosocial status during and after COVID-19 outbreak mandatory quarantine: A cross-s ectional study // Journal of Community Psychology. 2021. Vol. 49. No. 7. Pp. 2506–2516.
30. Zhang W.-R., Wang K., Yin L., Zhao W.-F., Xue Q., Peng M., Min B.-Q., Tian Q., Leng H.-X., Du J.-L., Chang H., Yang Y., Li W., Shangguan F.-F., Yan T.-Y., Dong H.-Q., Han Y., Wang Y.-P., Cosci F., Wang H.-X. Mental Health and Psychosocial Problems of Medical Health Workers during the COVID-19 Epidemic in China // Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics. 2020. Vol. 89. No. 4. Pp. 242–250.
Review
For citations:
Maltsev A.V., Lyubyakin A.A., Kasyanova T.I., Chalikov S.A. Review of International Studies on Human Behavior During a Pandemic. Surgut State Pedagogical University Bulletin. 2022;(5 (80)):97-105. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.26105/SSPU.2022.80.5.016