Publication date: Feb 04, 2025
The COVID-19 pandemic led to widespread decreases in well-being, and people turned to various coping resources to mitigate declines in well-being. In a large (Nā=ā873) representative US adult sample collected in the fall of 2020, we examined the degree to which people coped using the arts and humanities and the perceived impact of the pandemic and how these factors were associated with well-being. We found coping with the arts was associated with many facets of well-being and, for many of these associations, the more people felt impacted by the pandemic, the stronger the relationship with coping with the arts. We further examined the nature of people’s typical arts engagement (e. g. immersion, reflectiveness) with the use of arts to cope. These findings suggest the arts may play a role in well-being experiences during challenging circumstances and the need for continued examination of the role the arts play in well-being.
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
Coping | Arts engagement |
Humanities | COVID-19 |
Pandemic | positive humanities |
well-being |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | COVID-19 pandemic |
disease | IDO | role |