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Emotional empathy mediates the relationship between personality traits and coping strategies in orphan and non-orphan students

Muhammad Aqeel (Department of Psychology, Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan)
Rafia Komal (Department of Psychology, National University of Sciences and Technology – NUST, Islamabad, Pakistan)
Tanvir Akhtar (Department of Psychology, Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan)

International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare

ISSN: 2056-4902

Article publication date: 9 April 2019

Issue publication date: 9 April 2019

200

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to inspect the potential mediation pathways among emotional empathy, personality traits and coping strategies in orphan and non-orphan students. Additionally, it designed to investigate the association of coping strategies with emotional empathy and personality traits.

Design/methodology/approach

Purposive sampling technique and cross-sectional design were employed in current study. The data of 130 adolescents (institutionalized orphans, n= 62; school students, n=68) were included from different high schools and orphanages of Rawalpindi and Islamabad, Pakistan, in 2017. Three instruments, emotional empathy scale (Mehrabian and Epstein, 1972; Shazia, 2004), coping of problem experience (Carver, 1989; Akhtar, 2005), and Eysenck personality questionnaire (Naqvi and Kamal, 2010; Eysenck, 1964; Eysenck and Eysenck, 1994), were employed to measure personality traits, emotional empathy and coping strategies in orphan and non-orphan students.

Findings

Mediation analyses illustrated that personality traits relegated active avoidance coping strategy through emotional empathy in orphan students. On contrary, the study findings demonstrated that neurotic personality promoted positive coping strategy through emotional empathy in non-orphan students.

Research limitations/implications

The methodological limitations of this study are that the sample is of 130 participants that limits the generalizability of its results; furthermore, it was done on only the male orphans students of only one institute. Further research can be done on different orphanages to enhance the generalizability of results. This study included orphan and non-orphan students from the two cities of Pakistan; consequently, its findings may not be generalizable to the whole population. In the future, cross-sectional and experimental researches working with more assorted data could help elucidate the mechanisms by which interpersonal factors affect and stimulate coping strategies in orphans and high school students.

Practical implications

This paper exposes a number of ways for upcoming future studies. This study findings can be employed to enhance knowledge and offer assistance for orphans, on how to identify and get help from coping resources to tackle various problems and how to build new psychological preventions and interventions strategies in the Pakistani society. There still exists a need to find out the effect of emotion, empathy on personality types in relation to different environmental conditions. The findings have implications for pedagogical intervention as such improvements can be initiated in the pedagogical context.

Social implications

This study comprised only orphan and non-orphan students from two twin cities of Pakistan; consequently, its findings may not be applicable to the whole population. In future, cross-sectional and experimental researches with more assorted data will assist clarify the mechanism that interpersonal factors affect and stimulate coping strategies in high school students.

Originality/value

Study findings proposed that coping strategies can be promoted by interpersonal factors such as personality traits and empathy to tackle different orphan’s psychological problem in various negative situation.

Keywords

Citation

Aqeel, M., Komal, R. and Akhtar, T. (2019), "Emotional empathy mediates the relationship between personality traits and coping strategies in orphan and non-orphan students", International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare, Vol. 12 No. 2, pp. 163-176. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJHRH-02-2018-0015

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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