| Literature DB >> 35095240 |
Andrea Baroncelli1, Lucrezia Tomberli1, MariaGiulia Taddei1, Enrica Ciucci1.
Abstract
This paper presents the development and the initial validation of a self-report questionnaire (the Facing the Pandemic Lockdown Questionnaire - FPLQ) focused on the way in which people faced the impact of the lockdown related to the Coronavirus Disease 19. 504 adults (81.55% females; M age = 32.71 years, SD = 11.19) took part to the study. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses revealed a 15-item 4-factor structure, invariant for gender and age: two dimensions related to maladaptive processes (i.e., "Perception of low social connectedness and lack of routines" and "Health worry") and two dimensions related to adaptive processes (i.e., "Positive re-thinking" and "Perception of online social connectedness"). Further, we investigated the associations between these dimensions and measures pertaining cognitive (i.e., internal and external health locus of control), emotional (i.e., positive and negative affect), and relational (i.e., attitude and behaviors toward civic engagement) processes, also testing the moderating role of gender and age. Finally, the potential usefulness of this new tool for both extant and future psychological research was highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: Meaning making; Pandemic lockdown; Post-traumatic growth; Social connectedness; Worry
Year: 2022 PMID: 35095240 PMCID: PMC8781700 DOI: 10.1007/s12144-022-02701-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Psychol ISSN: 1046-1310
Factor loadings from exploratory factor analysis (n = 252).
| Item | Content | Theoretical construct | Factor loadings | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| With reference to the lockdown caused by the current health situation,... | Factor 1: Perception of low social connectedness and lack of routines | Factor 2: Positive re-thinking | Factor 3: Health worry | Factor 4: Perception of online social connectedness | ||
| 1 | I am worried about the economic crisis. | Worry | .26 | .03 | .09 | .14 |
| 2 | I am rediscovering passions that I had overlooked. | Post-traumatic growth | -.14 | -.07 | -.02 | |
| 3 | I am thinking about how much I like/I don't like my job. | Meaning making | .11 | .03 | -.01 | |
| 4 | I am feeling the need to return to normality. | Social connectedness | .05 | .08 | -.01 | |
| 5 | I am worried about the thought of getting sick. | Worry | -.11 | -.13 | .02 | |
| 6 | I am rediscovering old ways of spending time (e.g., playing cards, board games). | Post-traumatic growth | -.12 | .02 | .28 | |
| 7 | I am thinking about how important it is for me to spend time with people. | Meaning making | .46 | .37 | .06 | .06 |
| 8 | I am feeling part of an online community (e.g., Instagram, Social Networks). | Social connectedness | .04 | .10 | -.08 | |
| 9 | I am worried about the thought that my loved ones could get sick. | Worry | -.02 | .13 | .05 | |
| 10 | I am rediscovering the time to do many things that I had left aside. | Post-traumatic growth | -.11 | -.04 | -.08 | |
| 11 | I am thinking about what things really matter to me. | Meaning making | .32 | .14 | -.01 | |
| 12 | I am feeling supported by influencers and people around the world. | Social connectedness | -.01 | -.11 | .05 | |
| 13 | I am worried about the thought that I may die. | Worry | .07 | .02 | -.08 | |
| 14 | I am feeling more alone than usual. | Social connectedness | .02 | .01 | -.09 | |
| 15 | I am worried about not being able to go out and do the things I usually do. | Worry | -.14 | -.06 | -.004 | |
| 16 | I am feeling caged. | Social connectedness | -.11 | -.06 | -.03 | |
| 17 | I am worried about the negative consequences on my work. | Worry | .27 | .10 | -.07 | .16 |
| 18 | I am worried not to see friends and/or companions anymore. | Worry | -.09 | -.05 | .06 | |
| Factor 1 | - | |||||
| Factor 2 | .36 | - | ||||
| Factor 3 | .27 | .35 | - | |||
| Factor 4 | .31 | .49 | .23 | - | ||
Factor loadings in bold indicate to which factor each item was attributed. Items 1, 7, and 17 did not meet retention criteria. + Since this scale is composed by two items, reported values refers to correlational coefficients
Comparison of different factor models for CFA
| Model | χ2 | CFI | TLI | RMSEA [95% CI] | SRMR | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 (theory-driven four-factor model) | 596.161 | 129 | < .001 | .623 | .553 | .121 [.111;.131] | .116 |
| Model 2 (one-factor model) | 772.891 | 90 | < .001 | .347 | .239 | .174 [.162;.185] | .159 |
| Model 3 (two-factor model) | 511.390 | 89 | < .001 | .596 | .523 | .137 [.126;.149] | .117 |
| Model 4 (four-factor model) | 197.794 | 84 | < .001 | .888 | .860 | .074 [.061;.088] | .074 |
| Model 5 (four-factot model with modification indices) | 148.836 | 82 | < .001 | .934 | .916 | .058 [.043;.072] | .071 |
CFI = comparative fit index, TLI = Tucker Lewis index, RMSEA = root mean square error of approximation, SRMR = standardized root mean square residual
Fig. 1Standardized factor loadings and correlation indices from confirmatory factor analysis (n = 252). Notes. * p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p < .001. McDonald’s Omegas were .79 for perception of low social connectedness and lack of routines, .70 for Positive re-thinking, .80 for health worry, and correlation between the two items of Perception of online social connectedness was .63
Comparison of different factor models testing measurement invariance.
| Model | χ2 | CFI | RMSEA | ΔCFI | ΔRMSEA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Configural | 320.208 | 164 | < .001 | .928 | .063 | - | - |
| Metric | 337.952 | 175 | < .001 | .925 | .062 | -.003 | -.001 |
| Scalar | 362.512 | 186 | < .001 | .919 | .063 | -.006 | .001 |
| Strict | 389.243 | 201 | < .001 | .913 | .062 | -.006 | -.001 |
| Configural | 338.663 | 164 | < .001 | .920 | .066 | - | - |
| Metric | 344.804 | 175 | < .001 | .922 | .063 | .002 | -.003 |
| Scalar | 373.662 | 186 | < .001 | .914 | .065 | -.008 | .002 |
| Strict | 390.553 | 201 | < .001 | .914 | .062 | .000 | -.003 |
CFI = comparative fit index, RMSEA = root mean square error of approximation
Descriptive statistics and zero-order correltions (Pearson’s r) for study variables
| Variable | McDonald’s Omega | Skewness | Kurtosis | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 FPLQ-Perception of low social connectedness and lack of routines | .81 | 3.26 (.95) | .01 (.11) | -.85 (.22) | / | ||||||||||
| 2 FPLQ-Positive re-thinking | .73 | 3.10 (.88) | -.16 (.11) | -.39 (.22) | .16*** | / | |||||||||
| 3 FPLQ-Health worry | .80 | 3.36 (.86) | .06 (.11) | -.69 (.22) | .18*** | .18*** | / | ||||||||
| 4 FPLQ-Perception of online social connectedness | .61+ | 2.42 (1.19) | .50 (.11) | -.79 (.22) | .19*** | .39*** | .18*** | / | |||||||
| 5 HLCS-Internal | .88 | 3.95 (.68) | -.34 (.11) | -.26 (.22) | .13** | .11* | .01 | .002 | / | ||||||
| 6 HLCS-External (Others) | .67 | 2.02 (.81) | .63 (.11) | -.17 (.22) | .32*** | .21*** | .18*** | .26*** | -.14** | / | |||||
| 7 HLCS-External (God) | .48+ | 2.06 (1.10) | .71 (.11) | -.43 (.22) | .12** | .12** | .16*** | .13** | .10* | .17*** | / | ||||
| 8 PANAS-PA | .86 | 3.25 (.76) | -.18 (.11) | .01 (.22) | -.22*** | .12** | -.002 | .06 | .12** | -.03 | .12** | / | |||
| 9 PANAS-NA | .88 | 2.60 (.83) | .22 (.11) | -.58 (.22) | .39*** | .09* | .40*** | .19*** | -.01 | .27*** | .10* | -.35*** | / | ||
| 10 CES-Attitude | .85 | 5.36 (.98) | -.70 (.11) | .52 (.22) | -.01 | .31*** | .17*** | .29*** | .02 | .15*** | .09* | .17*** | .04 | / | |
| 11 CES-Behaviors | .83 | 4.32 (1.32) | -.08 (.11) | -.46 (.22) | -.02 | .20*** | -.01 | .18*** | -.08 | .13** | .04 | .23*** | -.05 | .68*** | / |
FPLQ: Facing the Pandemic Lockdown Questionnaire. PANAS: Positive and Negative Affect Schedule. HLCS: Health Locus of Control Scale. CES: Civic Engagement Scale.
+ Since this scale is composed by two items, reported values refers to correlational coefficients. *p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001
Regression analyses testing the unique role of gender, age, and FPLQ scales on the other study variables
| Gender | Age | FPLQ-Perception of low social connectedness and lack of routines | FPLQ-Positive | FPLQ-Health worry | FPLQ-Perception of online social connectedness | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HLCS-Internal | .15** | -.01 | .12** | .14*** | -.01 | -.05 | (6,503) = 4.467*** | .04 |
| HLCS-External (Others) | .03 | -.04 | .25*** | .10* | .09* | .15** (a) | (6,503) = 15.618*** | .15 |
| HLCS-External (God) | .05 | .12** | .08 | .08 | .11* | .10* | (6,503) = 5.233*** | .05 |
| PANAS-PA | .24*** | .16*** | -.25*** (b) | .18*** | -.01 | .13** | (6,503) = 15.285*** | .15 |
| PANAS-NA | -.13** | -.08 | .32*** | -.08 | .34*** | .05 | (6,503) = 34.723*** | .29 |
| CES-Attitude | -.06 | .09* | -.09* | .22*** (c) | .09* | .22*** | (6,503) = 15.286*** | .15 |
| CES-Behaviors | -.06 | .06 | -.06 | .16*** (d ) | -.06 | .15** | (6,503) = 6.095*** | .06 |
FPLQ: Facing the Pandemic Lockdown Questionnaire. PANAS: Positive and Negative Affect Schedule. HLCS: Health Locus of Control Scale. CES: Civic Engagement Scale. *p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001
(a) There was a significant two-way interaction effect for perception of online social connectedness and Age (β =.13, p < .01; F(10,503) = 11.265, p < .001; ΔR2 = .02, p < .01, R2 = .17): β = .34, p < .001 in older; β = .03, p > .05 in younger
(b) There was a significant two-way interaction effect for perception of low social connectedness and lack of routines and Gender (β =.14, p < .01; F(10,503) = 10.382, p < .001; ΔR2 = .01, p < .05, R2 = .16): β = -.30, p < .001 in females; β = .001, p > .05 in males
(c) There was a significant two-way interaction effect for positive re-thinking and Age (β = -.13, p < .01; F(10,503) = 10.490, p < .001; ΔR2 = .01, p < .05, R2 = .16): β = .10, p > .05 in older; β = .35, p < .001 in younger
(d) There was a significant two-way interaction effect for positive re-thinking and Age (β = -.20, p < .001; F(10,503) = 5.971, p < .001; ΔR2 = .03, p < .001, R2 = .09): β = -.02, p > .05 in older; β = .36, p < .001 in younger
Fig. 2The moderating role of age in the association between perception of online social connectedness and other health locus of control
Fig. 3The moderating role of gender in the association between perception of low social connectedness and lack of routines and state positive affect
Fig. 4The moderating role of age in the association between positive re-thinking and attitude toward civic engagement
Fig. 5The moderating role of age in the association between positive re-thinking and behaviors related to civic engagement