Explaining resilience in response to potential traumatic event: Sense of coherence and trajectories of anxiety during COVID-19.

Publication date: Feb 06, 2025

Longitudinal studies have shown that most individuals can stay well in response to potential traumatic events (PTEs). However, the mechanisms underlying such resilience are still unclear. This study integrates Bonanno’s resilience model (Bonanno, 2004) with the salutogenic approach (Antonovsky, 1979) to investigate the association between anxiety trajectories and sense of coherence (SOC). Data were collected from 526 (279 males) Israeli adults via online questionnaires at seven time points between March 2020 and February 2022, in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Latent profile analysis identified four anxiety trajectories: (a) resilience (consistently low symptom levels), (b) chronic (consistently elevated symptoms), (c) improving (initially elevated symptoms decreasing over time), and (d) high resilience (sustained absence of anxiety symptoms), providing partial support for Bonanno’s model. As expected, SOC significantly differentiated these trajectories, with the “high-resilience” group exhibiting the strongest SOC, followed by the “resilience” and “improving” groups, while the chronic group displayed the weakest SOC levels. This research underscores SOC as a key predictor of anxiety trajectories in navigating PTEs, shedding light on the importance of individual resilience factors in managing adversity. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

Concepts Keywords
February Anxiety
Israeli Bonanno
Males Chronic
Pandemic Coherence
Covid
Elevated
Levels
Potential
Ptes
Resilience
Sense
Soc
Symptoms
Trajectories
Traumatic

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH anxiety
disease MESH COVID-19
disease IDO symptom

Original Article

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