Athletes' Coping With the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Role of Self-Compassion and Cognitive Appraisal

J Sport Exerc Psychol. 2024 Jan 8;46(1):11-21. doi: 10.1123/jsep.2023-0175. Print 2024 Feb 1.

Abstract

Coping with the COVID-19 pandemic had implications for athletes' mental well-being. This mixed-methods study examined the influence of self-compassion on athletes' coping during the pandemic through the mediator of cognitive appraisal. The prospective design involved 90 athletes completing two online surveys 1 week apart measuring self-compassion, cognitive appraisal, and coping strategies. The PROCESS macro was used for the mediation analysis. A qualitative thematic analysis was used to explore athletes' responses to the pandemic during the second survey. Self-compassion had an indirect negative effect on avoidance-focused coping by appraising the pandemic as less of a threat (95% confidence interval [-0.20, -0.001]) and had a total effect on emotion-focused coping (95% confidence interval [0.02, 0.40]). Based on the thematic analysis, athletes described many raw emotions and a variety of coping strategies during the pandemic. Self-compassion demonstrated promising benefits to athletes who dealt with the challenging situation of the pandemic.

Keywords: college athletics; coronavirus; stress; well-being.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Psychological
  • Athletes / psychology
  • COVID-19*
  • Cognition
  • Humans
  • Pandemics
  • Self-Compassion