Fears of compassion magnify the harmful effects of threat of COVID‐19 on mental health and social safeness across 21 countries
Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy2021Vol. 28(6), pp. 1317–1333
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2021 papers
Marcela Matos, Kirsten McEwan, Martin Kanovský, Júlia Halamová, Stanley R. Steindl, Nuno Ferreira, Mariana Linharelhos, Daniel Rijo, Kenichi Asano, Sónia Gregório, Margarita G. Márquez, Sara P. Vilas, Gonzalo Brito‐Pons, Paola Lucena‐Santos, Margareth da Silva Oliveira, Érika Leonardo de Souza, Lorena Llobenes, Natali Gumiy, Maria Ileana Costa, Noor Habib, Reham Hakem, Hussain Khrad, Ahmad Alzahrani, Simone Cheli, Nicola Petrocchi, Elli Tholouli, Philia Issari, Gregoris Simos, Vibeke Lunding‐Gregersen, Ask Elklit, Russell L. Kolts, Allison C. Kelly, Catherine Bortolon, Pascal Delamillieure, Marine Paucsik, Julia E. Wahl, Mariusz Zięba, Mateusz Zatorski, Tomasz Komendziński, Shuge Zhang, Jaskaran Basran, Antonios Kagialis, James N. Kirby, Paul Gilbert
Abstract
Fears of compassion have a universal magnifying effect on the damaging impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health and social safeness. Compassion focused interventions and communications could be implemented to reduce resistances to compassion and promote mental wellbeing during and following the pandemic.
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