Relationships between social interactions, basic psychological needs, and wellbeing during the COVID-19 pandemic

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Dimmock, James;Krause, Amanda E.;Rebar, Amanda;Jackson, Ben
Abstract

Objective: Social lockdowns associated with COVID-19 have led individuals to increasingly rely on video conferencing and other technology-based interactions to fulfil social needs. The extent to which these interactions, as well as traditional face-to-face interactions, satisfied psychological needs and supported wellbeing during different periods of the COVID-19 pandemic is yet to be elucidated. In this study, university students’ social interactions (both technology-based and face-to-face), psychological needs, and wellbeing were assessed at six time points across four months of government-enforced restrictions in Australia. Design: Repeated survey assessment. Main outcome measures: Basic psychological need satisfaction; general wellbeing. Results: Results demonstrated that, at the within-subjects level, relatedness satisfaction (feeling understood by, cared for, and connected to others) significantly mediated the relationship between technology-based interaction and wellbeing. Autonomy satisfaction (self-initiation and feeling ownership over decisions and behaviours) mediated the relationship between face-to-face interactions and wellbeing at the within-person level. Conclusion: Discussion is centred on the importance of technology-based interactions for needs satisfaction and wellbeing during periods of social isolation.

Journal

Psychology & Health

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Volume

37

ISBN/ISSN

1476-8321

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Issue

4

Pages Count

13

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Publisher

Taylor & Francis

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1080/08870446.2021.1921178