Life Satisfaction and Psychological Well-Being of Rescue Operations Participants in a Prolonged Emergency Situation


  •  Yaremtchuk S. V.    

Abstract

This paper reports on study which investigated specificity of life satisfaction and psychological well-being of rescue operations participants in emergency situation. Participants of the study were military servants and emergency workers (44 males, aged 19-26) who were compared to the men not taking part in the rescue operations (44 males, aged 17-26). Data were collected with Personal Wellbeing Index and the Ryff’s Scale of Psychological Well-Being. Emergency situation is considered as a challenge for personal growth.

The study proved that an emergency (in this case, flooding of large areas where people lived) creates a “challenge” for a person (rescuer or participant). As a result, there is a mobilization of physical and spiritual resources of an individual. Participants of the rescue operations are characterized by activity in the situation management; they have the ability of effective use of the life circumstances. The result is rising of the subjective and psychological well-being level.



This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
  • ISSN(Print): 1918-7173
  • ISSN(Online): 1918-7181
  • Started: 2009
  • Frequency: quarterly

Journal Metrics

  • Google-based Impact Factor (2021): 0.85
  • h-index (December 2021): 35
  • i10-index (December 2021): 262
  • h5-index (December 2021): 18  
  • h5-median(December 2021): 24

( The data was calculated based on Google Scholar Citations. Click Here to Learn More. )

Contact