Abstract

In the face of the sudden outbreak of coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19), some students showed resilience in coping with difficulties while some did not. While different types of students showed different levels of resilience, are there significant characteristics among students with similar levels of resilience? In this study, 3,454 students (aged 15–25 years) were surveyed to understand students' perceived social support-coping modes while investigating the demographic characteristics and mental health status of subclasses of different modes. We found that (1) in the two subgroups of students with extremely low and low levels of perceived social support, the source of students' perceived social support did not have a clear orientation; in the two subgroups with moderate and high levels of perceived social support, the most perceived emotional support was from family and friends, while the least perceived support was companionship from teachers, classmates, and relatives, and problems related to the dependability of friends and communication with family. (2) The degree of social support perceived by students is directly proportional to the coping tendency, i.e., as the degree of perceived social support increases, the proportion of students adopting active coping strategies increases while that of students adopting negative coping strategies decreases; thus, we concluded that high levels of emotional support from family and friends can increase students' tendency of adopting positive strategies to cope with difficulties, while problems related to the dependability of friends and communication with family decrease students' tendency of adopting positive coping strategies. (3) Gender had a significant impact on the extremely low and low levels of perceived social support-negative coping tendencies; these subgroups accounted for 34.6% of the total students. Gender showed no significant influence on other subgroups, a school type had no impact on the distribution of the subgroups. (4) The higher the degree of perceived social support, the lower is the degree of students' general anxiety, and the lower is the degree of impact by the COVID-19 pandemic. The subdivision of student groups allows us to design more targeted support programmes for students with different psychological characteristics to help them alleviate stress during the COVID-19 epidemic.

Highlights

  • Due to the sudden outbreak of coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19), comprehensive social distancing measures were widely adopted, and students had to shelter in place at home

  • Built on the previous researches and methodologies, in this study, we conducted latent profile analysis (LPA) based on three common forms of social support to understand the overall perceived social support model of the participants and divided the participants into two subgroups to construct an LPA model to classify subgroups in terms of perceived social support-coping tendencies; we examined the coping strategies of secondary technical school students and college students under each social support mode during the COVID-19 pandemic and the major demographic characteristics of the students

  • If the p-values for the Lo-Mendell-Rubin adjusted likelihood ratio test (LMR-LRT) and based likelihood ratio test (BLRT) reach a statistically significant level, the K-class model is significantly better than the k-1-class model (Muthén and Muthén, 2000)

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Summary

Introduction

Due to the sudden outbreak of coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19), comprehensive social distancing measures were widely adopted, and students had to shelter in place at home. Based on social support theory, this study aims to explore the impact of social support on students’ resilience. This study will discriminate the different perceived levels of social support among students and its impacts on students’ coping tendency, and further investigate the effect of social support-coping mode on students’ mental health. The same stressful situation can have different impacts on different individuals (Guay et al, 2013) Those who receive more support from family or friends have a stronger mental capacity and are more mentally and physically healthy (Seiffge-Krenke and Pakalniskiene, 2011; Cao et al, 2020); in contrast, those who rarely receive similar support have a low mental capacity and poor mental and physical health (Elmer et al, 2020; Li et al, 2020). An individual’s social relationship background had positive effects on his/her resistance, mitigation as well as prevention, and had a beneficial bearing on his/her health (Haber et al, 2007; Stenling et al, 2015; Labrague et al, 2020)

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