Pandemics are global outbreaks of novel or re-emerging infectious diseases, and reveal aspects of humanity rarely seen in calmer times. Pandemics will likely become more prevalent in the coming years due to climate change, the growing global population, and other factors. Psychology plays an essential role in pandemics, in which peoples beliefs, emotions, and behaviors influence the spreading and containment of infection. Uncertainty is an inherent aspect of pandemics; when facedwith novel pathogens, people cope with these invisible, uncertain threats in various ways, including coping strategies that provide only an illusion of control, making people calmer but not safer. Other psychological phenomena observed during pandemics include polarized fear reactions (excessive alarmvs. undue disregard for the threat), fleeing, panic-buying, xenophobia, rumors and conspiracy theories, protests about wearing protective facemasks, anti-vaccination attitudes, lockdown protests, increases in mood and anxiety disorders, and other societal problems. Efforts to manage one problem (e.g., lockdown to stem the spread of infection) may worsen other problems (e.g., mental health). The New Psychology of Pandemics offers a comprehensive analysis of these and other issues concerning the psychology of pandemics, to prepare for future global outbreaks of infectious diseases. The book explores promising new directions for maintaining and improving mental health and enhancing adherence to pandemic mitigation measures such as social distancing, mask-wearing, and vaccination.
Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Glossary; About the Author; Psychological Phenomena and Pandemic-Mitigation Methods; The Psychological Footprint; Pandemic-Related Stressors; Pandemic-Mitigation Methods: An Overview; Risk Communication; Face Masks and Vaccines; Social Distancing: Impact, Objections, and Alternatives; Politics and Protests; Coping During Disease Outbreaks; Fleeing: Urban Exodus from Contagion; Part II. Psychological Processes and Mechanisms; Exposure to News and Social Media; Heuristics and Biases in Threat Evaluation; Rumors and Conspiracy Theories; Beliefs About Health and Disease; Death Anxiety; Diseases, Disgust, and Xenophobia; Magical Thinking and Superstitious Behavior; The Illusion of Control and Other Self-Serving Biases; Personality and Pandemics; Part III. Mental Health; Pandemics and Mental Health; Infection-Induced Psychopathology; Immunization Stress Reactions; Managing Mental Health During Pandemics; Part IV. Aftermath and Future; Life in the Aftermath; Future Pandemics; References; Index;
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