PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Typhoon survivors' subjective wellbeing-A different view of responses to natural disaster.

  • Yaira Hamama-Raz,
  • Yuval Palgi,
  • Elazar Leshem,
  • Menachem Ben-Ezra,
  • Osnat Lavenda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184327
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. e0184327

Abstract

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Subjective well-being was evaluated three weeks after Super Typhoon Haiyan struck the Philippines. Based on the Conservation of Resources theory, which focuses on the role of resources in understanding adjustment following trauma, data was collected on lost resources. In line with the Conservation of Resources theory, four categories of resources were defined: objects-residential property; condition-gender health state and witness to injury; personal-coping strategies; energy-relationships.Eight hundred thirty-four people from the Philippines filled out self-report measures using an online interview system regarding: socio demographics data, subjective well-being, using the Delighted Terrible Faces Scale (DTS), disaster related experiences, coping strategies, personal relationships, obtained through support sources (close family, relatives and friends, community) and assessing problems with those relationships after Haiyan.Subjective well-being was predicted by the following classes of resources: objects (home damage) condition (self-rated health and witness to injury), personal (positive reframing and self-blame coping strategies) and energy resources (relations and problems in relations).The results imply the important role individual's resources (i.e. objects, personal characteristics, conditions, and energies) might play in promoting subjective well-being, following natural disaster.