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    • List of Articles COVID-19

      • Open Access Article

        1 - Resilience Factors of nurses involved in clinical care of Covid-19 patients
        حمید آروند behnam abdi nasrin askarzad hamideh erteghaei
        The aim of this study was to discover factors enhancing the psychological resilience of nursing staff involved in the frontline of clinical care of Coronavirus Disease Patients. The research method is exploratory mixed method (qualitative - quantitative). In qualitativ More
        The aim of this study was to discover factors enhancing the psychological resilience of nursing staff involved in the frontline of clinical care of Coronavirus Disease Patients. The research method is exploratory mixed method (qualitative - quantitative). In qualitative stage, Systematic and in-depth review of qualitative studies related to the subject and in quantitative stage, a questionnaire has been used to collect data. Based on the results of the study, three categories including mobilize public support for mental health care of nursing staff, fostering key resilience competencies and working life of nursing staff were identified and extracted as key categories affecting psychological resilience of nursing staff involved in the front line of crisis. In the quantitative stage, the validity and reliability of the structure for all components except public emotional support were confirmed. Also, in ranking the importance of the approved components, the competence of the head nurses in leading the nursing teams was in the first place. According to the changes of the nature of diseases and public health challenges, it is necessary to address problems such as psychological trauma of nursing staff that have a profound and lasting impact on their performance and quality of clinical care of patients, and to define and apply new standards in clinical care management appropriate to the nature and characteristics of future viral diseases Predicted by Scientists and International experts. Manuscript profile
      • Open Access Article

        2 - The causal model of elite athletes' burnout based on athletes' perfectionism during the Covid-19: the mediating role of coaching style
        Sahar Zarei Mahmoud Mohebi Hassan  Garayagh Zandi
        Burnout encompassed a host of medical, psychological, emotional and performance-related issues that can always be affected by individual and coach factors in elite athletes; therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between perfectionism and b More
        Burnout encompassed a host of medical, psychological, emotional and performance-related issues that can always be affected by individual and coach factors in elite athletes; therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between perfectionism and burnout, mediated by perceived coaching style in the context of the Covid-19 epidemic. In this cross-sectional study, 258 elite athletes (M= 22.05 years, SD= 3.08; 148 male) participated and completed scales of multidimensional perfectionism, athlete burnout and coaching style. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics by structural equation modeling. The results indicate that direct paths perfectionism to burnout, perfectionism to coaching style, coaching style to burnout, and indirect pathways to perfectionism to burnout were mediating by coaching style, significant. The results indicate that during the COVID 19, athletes who are less able to organize performance standards and expectations of themselves and others, and who are more committed to meeting external demands, are at higher risk of burnout. One could develop coach-education programmes that challenge beliefs regarding the effectiveness of controlling coaching behaviors to reduce perfectionist tendencies and expectations in athletes. In doing so, one might curtail the risk of burnout in athlete during the COVID 19. Manuscript profile
      • Open Access Article

        3 - Five major personality factors in the psychological distress of an improved covid-19 population: The moderating role of gender
        Maedeh Ahadi Jafar Hasani Mehdi Akbari
        The global prevalence and unprecedented COVID-19 disease is a serious threat to public health and increases psychological distress in individuals. It is crucial to study the structural model of COVID-19 psychological factors associated with COVID-19 and the lack of prev More
        The global prevalence and unprecedented COVID-19 disease is a serious threat to public health and increases psychological distress in individuals. It is crucial to study the structural model of COVID-19 psychological factors associated with COVID-19 and the lack of previous research on this issue presented in this study. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of gender modulation in the relationship between the five major factors of personality and psychological distress in hospitalized COVID-19 patients. Improved patients of Covid-19 (N= 705; Age range 25-80 years, women= 63/20%; Mean age = 41/32, SD = 11/05 years). They were selected from Sasan and Baqiyatallah hospitals by available sampling method. The instruments used were the Five Personality-Short Form Questionnaire (BFI-S) and the Psychological Distress Scale (K10). R software (Lavan) package was used to analyze the data. Openness in women increases anxiety, but in men, it reduces anxiety. Moreover, the effect of openness on distress in the two groups of men and women was statistically significant (P = 0.002); Extraversion was also associated with decreased anxiety in men (P = 0.000); therefore, gender is the moderator of these relationships. These results explain the process of psychological distress by considering personality factors and the critical role of gender as a moderator and the need to pay attention to intervention approaches to reduce the effects of psychological distress in the research literature. Manuscript profile