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Articles

Purposefulness and daily life in a pandemic: Predicting daily affect and physical symptoms during the first weeks of the COVID-19 response

, , , &
Pages 985-1001 | Received 01 Sep 2020, Accepted 29 Mar 2021, Published online: 11 May 2021
 

Abstract

Objective

Sense of purpose has been associated with greater health and well-being, even in daily contexts. However, it is unclear whether effects would hold in daily life during COVID-19, when people may have difficulty seeing a path towards their life goals.

Design

The current study investigated whether purposefulness predicted daily positive affect, negative affect, and physical symptoms. Participants (n = 831) reported on these variables during the first weeks of the COVID-19 response in North America.

Main outcome measures

Participants completed daily surveys asking them for daily positive events, stressors, positive affect, negative affect, physical symptoms, and purposefulness.

Results

Purposefulness at between- and within-person levels predicted less negative affect and physical symptoms, but more positive affect at the daily level. Between-person purposefulness interacted with positive events when predicting negative and positive affect, suggesting that purposeful people may be less reactive to positive events. However, between-person purposefulness also interacted with daily stressors, insofar that stressors predicted greater declines in positive affect for purposeful people.

Conclusion

Being a purposeful person holds positive implications for daily health and well-being, even during the pandemic context. However, purposefulness may hold some consequences unique to the COVID-19 context, which merit attention in future research.

Disclosure statement

The authors have no conflicts of interest to report for this document.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (430-2019-00387), Social Sciences and Humanities Council grant (no. 435-2021-0895) and funding from the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research (SCH-2020-0590).

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