2023
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph20105873
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Relationship between COVID-19 Pandemic-Related Life Behavior, Dispositional Mindfulness, and Psychological Health: Evidence from a Sample of Japanese Working Adults

Hiromitsu Miyata,
Kaho Yamasaki,
Noh ChaeEun
et al.

Abstract: The present study investigated how altered daily life behavior and its self-evaluation associated with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic relate to psychological health in Japanese working adults, and how such relationships may be moderated by dispositional mindfulness. A total of 1000 participants completed an online survey comprising questions on how they used time and self-evaluated life behavior before and during the pandemic, as well as scales on mindfulness and psychological health. The res… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…These results are consistent with our hypothesis that mindfulness as a component of self-compassion can be a protective factor against psychological symptoms that result from rumination [33]. The results also seem parallel to a good amount of research suggesting that dispositional mindfulness can have buffering effects against psychological symptoms (e.g., [27,28,56,57]). In the present study, mindfulness appeared to contribute to reduced anxiety only when ruminative tendency was low, and not when it was high.…”
Section: Moderating Roles Of Self-compassionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…These results are consistent with our hypothesis that mindfulness as a component of self-compassion can be a protective factor against psychological symptoms that result from rumination [33]. The results also seem parallel to a good amount of research suggesting that dispositional mindfulness can have buffering effects against psychological symptoms (e.g., [27,28,56,57]). In the present study, mindfulness appeared to contribute to reduced anxiety only when ruminative tendency was low, and not when it was high.…”
Section: Moderating Roles Of Self-compassionsupporting
confidence: 90%