Meaningful Activity, Psychosocial Wellbeing, and Poverty During COVID-19: A Longitudinal Study

Background: Only a few studies have explored experiences of meaningful activity and associations with psychosocial wellbeing during COVID-19. None reflect a Canadian context or focus on persons living in poverty. Purpose: To identify experiences and associations between meaningful activity and psych...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of occupational therapy (1939) 2023-06, Vol.90 (2), p.136-151
Hauptverfasser: Marshall, Carrie Anne, Gewurtz, Rebecca, Holmes, Julia, Phillips, Brooke, Aryobi, Suliman, Smith-Carrier, Tracy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Only a few studies have explored experiences of meaningful activity and associations with psychosocial wellbeing during COVID-19. None reflect a Canadian context or focus on persons living in poverty. Purpose: To identify experiences and associations between meaningful activity and psychosocial wellbeing for persons living in poverty during the first year of COVID-19. Method: We delivered a quantitative survey at three time points during the first year of the pandemic supplemented by qualitative interviews at Time(T) 1 and 1 year later at T3. Findings: One hundred and eight participants completed T1 surveys, and 27 participated in qualitative interviews. Several statistically significant correlations between indices of meaningful activity engagement and psychosocial wellbeing were identified across T1–T3. Meaningful activity decreased from T1–T3 [X2 (2, n = 49) = 9.110, p 
ISSN:0008-4174
1911-9828
DOI:10.1177/00084174231160950