Feeling COVID-19: intensity, clusters, and correlates of emotional responses to the pandemic

News of the pandemic has the potential to produce an array of positive and negative emotions, all of which have potent ramifications for subsequent risk to mental and physical well-being. This project sought to assess (a) the intensity of those emotional responses, (b) whether or not it was possible to identify meaningful clusters of emotional reactions, and (c) what social, personal, and communication indices might discriminate among those clusters. An online survey (N = 758) was conducted in April 2020 to assess emotional experiences of the pandemic with respect to fear, anger, sadness, contentment, and hope. COVID-related emotions were much more intense than emotions in everyday life or emotional responses to H1N1. Latent profile analysis produced a four-cluster solution in which two groups reported either high (Labiles) or low intensity of all five emotions (Stoics), and two other groups manifested either mainly positive (Optimists) or mainly negative affect (Pessimists). Profile membership was associated with sex, pre-existing health conditions, social connections to a positive diagnosis, political orientation, and variable patterns of interpersonal and mediated communication. Given the specific patterning of positive versus negative emotions, some groups are at higher risk of emotional sequelae than others. However, the intensity of emotional response in the entire sample, coupled with the negative-stronger-than-positive pattern, suggests the COVID-19 will produce undesirable, non-viral health consequences across the population.

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Risk Research on 2022-12-02, available online: https://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/13669877.2021.1958043.

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Work Title Feeling COVID-19: intensity, clusters, and correlates of emotional responses to the pandemic
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. James Price Dillard
  2. Chun Yang
  3. Yan Huang
Keyword
  1. COVID
  2. Coronavirus
  3. Emotion
  4. Well-being
  5. Interpersonal
  6. Media
License CC BY-NC 4.0 (Attribution-NonCommercial)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. Journal of Risk Research
Publication Date July 29, 2021
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.1080/13669877.2021.1958043
Deposited March 05, 2024

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Version 1
published

  • Created
  • Added Feeling_COVID_Full_Paper_Revised_ICA_04_11_2021.pdf
  • Added Creator James Price Dillard
  • Added Creator Chun Yang
  • Added Creator Yan Huang
  • Published
  • Updated Keyword, Publication Date Show Changes
    Keyword
    • COVID, Coronavirus, Emotion, Well-being, Interpersonal, Media
    Publication Date
    • 2021-01-01
    • 2021-07-29
  • Updated