COVID-19 related difficulties and perceived coping among university and college students: the moderating role of media-related exposure and stress

Citation:

Ruth Pat-Horenczyk, Bergman, Yoav S, Schiff, Miriam , Goldberg, Alon , Cohen, Ayala , Leshem, Becky , Jubran, Hisham , Mengisto, Wovit Worku-, Berkowitz, Ruth , and Benbenishty, Rami . 2021. “Covid-19 Related Difficulties And Perceived Coping Among University And College Students: The Moderating Role Of Media-Related Exposure And Stress”. European Journal Of Psychotraumatology, 12, Pp. 1929029. doi:10.1080/20008198.2021.1929029.

Abstract:

ABSTRACTBackground: University and college students are not usually identified as a population at risk during the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet, there is growing evidence of their specific distress associated with facing multiple abrupt changes and the need for rapid adaptation to a variety of academic, social, and financial challenges. The extent of their exposure to COVID-19 media and the associated media-related stress may further impair students? perceived coping.Objective: This study assessed COVID-19-related functional difficulties and perceived coping among higher education students in Israel and explored the moderating role played by media coverage of the pandemic in inducing stress and exacerbating COVID-19-related difficulties in perceived coping among students.Method: Data was collected from 7,446 students from seven academic centres in Israel through online questionnaires about four to six weeks after the outbreak of the pandemic in Israel.Results: The findings showed positive associations between COVID-19-related difficulties, media exposure, media-related stress, and decreased levels of perceived coping with the pandemic. Moreover, media-related stress (but not the level of media exposure) moderated the relationship between COVID-19-related difficulties and perceived coping: the associations were significantly stronger for students reporting high media-related stress in comparison to individuals reporting low media-related stress.Conclusions: These results highlight the specific role of media-related stress and the need to distinguish this risk factor from the global impact of exposure to media coverage. The need for self-monitoring of the subjective level of stress associated with media exposure should be part of the psychoeducation efforts provided by public health authorities for promoting self-care during the COVID-19 pandemic.