Meaning-making coping is a category of coping that uses our values, beliefs, and goals to shape meaning in stressful situations that are generally not conclusive to the use of problem-focused coping.
Meaning-making coping
- The meaning-making coping model contends that traumatic experiences upset our sense of how the world works and that using meaningful coping mechanisms can help one get the sense of how the world works back in sync with how one perceives traumatic events.
- When looking at the contextual and coping factors of two distinct meanings made: having made sense and perceiving post-traumatic progress in a nationally representative sample of 1004 persons about six weeks after the September 11th terrorist events in the United States.
- Having made sense was predominantly predicted by some parts of meaning-focused coping as well as another generally adaptive coping (e.g., active coping), while perceived growth was predicted by practically all types of coping, even if the two meanings made were positively associated.
To learn more about coping refer to:
https://brainly.com/question/12671183
#SPJ4