The Relationship Between Socioecological Factors and Resilience Among Urban Workers During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Dublin Core
Title
The Relationship Between Socioecological Factors and Resilience Among Urban Workers During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Subject
COVID-19, mental health, resilience, socioecological, working age
Description
The global outbreak occasioned by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has affected people of working age in urban
communities, both socially and psychologically, making resilience an important aspect of efforts to cope with such a
crisis. Against this backdrop, this study identified and investigated the socioecological factors associated with the
resilience of employable urban residents against the COVID-19 pandemic as part of a conceptual framework that
encompasses individual, family, and community resilience. This cross-sectional research involved 368 working-age
individuals recruited via simple randomization from communities in seven areas in central Bangkok. Data were collected
through a questionnaire survey and examined through path analysis run on AMOS. The hypothesized model was tested
on the basis of real data (χ
2 = 47.717, df = 10, p = .06, RMSEA = .03, RMR .097, GFI .978, CFI .99). The results showed
that an individual’s mental resilience factors and those of their family were generally more highly correlated with
community resilience than were the resilience of working-age people in urban regions (p < .01). However, the adaptability
of working-age individuals in urban areas more strongly depended on family resilience and individual mental health than
on community resilience. The results of this study will serve as a foundation for guiding community nurses in the design
and implementation of interventions aimed at promoting mental health among working-age individuals and their families
communities, both socially and psychologically, making resilience an important aspect of efforts to cope with such a
crisis. Against this backdrop, this study identified and investigated the socioecological factors associated with the
resilience of employable urban residents against the COVID-19 pandemic as part of a conceptual framework that
encompasses individual, family, and community resilience. This cross-sectional research involved 368 working-age
individuals recruited via simple randomization from communities in seven areas in central Bangkok. Data were collected
through a questionnaire survey and examined through path analysis run on AMOS. The hypothesized model was tested
on the basis of real data (χ
2 = 47.717, df = 10, p = .06, RMSEA = .03, RMR .097, GFI .978, CFI .99). The results showed
that an individual’s mental resilience factors and those of their family were generally more highly correlated with
community resilience than were the resilience of working-age people in urban regions (p < .01). However, the adaptability
of working-age individuals in urban areas more strongly depended on family resilience and individual mental health than
on community resilience. The results of this study will serve as a foundation for guiding community nurses in the design
and implementation of interventions aimed at promoting mental health among working-age individuals and their families
Creator
Puttaporn Onkhamsee, Sukanya Tantiprasoplap, Wanna Sanongdej
Source
DOI: 10.7454/jki.v28i3.1424
Publisher
Universitas Indonesia
Date
2025
Contributor
Sri Wahyuni
Rights
pISSN 1410-4490; eISSN 2354-9203
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Text
Files
Collection
Citation
Puttaporn Onkhamsee, Sukanya Tantiprasoplap, Wanna Sanongdej, “The Relationship Between Socioecological Factors and Resilience Among Urban Workers During the COVID-19 Pandemic,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed February 21, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/10997.