Differential Relationship of Coping Styles with Well-Being and Ill-Being of Professional Firemen Cover Image

Differential Relationship of Coping Styles with Well-Being and Ill-Being of Professional Firemen
Differential Relationship of Coping Styles with Well-Being and Ill-Being of Professional Firemen

Author(s): Andreja Avsec, Maja Novak, Boštjan Bajec
Subject(s): Educational Psychology, Social psychology and group interaction, Personality Psychology, Clinical psychology, Health and medicine and law
Published by: Društvo psihologa Srbije
Keywords: coping styles; well-being; ill-being; firemen;

Summary/Abstract: In the present study we were interested in how coping styles relate to different indicators of well– and ill-being. We assumed that coping styles are differently related to well– and ill-being indicators because they are theoretically and empirically independent from each other. To examine this assumption we asked 139 professional firemen to fill in measures of coping styles (COPE, EAS), well-being (PANAS, SWLS) and ill-being (IES-R, PANAS). The results confirmed the overall importance of non-constructive coping for illbeing and well-being, whereas constructive coping predicted only positive emotionality. The prototypical masculine working environment characteristic for our sample could be the cause that socially/emotionally oriented coping is the weakest predictor of well-being, although other studies report the adaptive role of conscientious dealing with individual’s own emotions as a coping style. Both well– and ill-being measures should be used to get an insight into a complex area of individual’s adaptation to stress.

  • Issue Year: 45/2012
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 59-70
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: English