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COVID-sumers: consumers’ feelings due Covid-19 pandemic in Brazil and potential implications for services marketing

Mellina da Silva Terres (Department of Exact and Applied Social Sciences, Federal University of Health Sciences of Porto Alegre (UFCSPA), Porto Alegre, Brazil)
Simoni F. Rohden (IPAM Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal and NOVA Information Management School (NOVA IMS), Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal)
Letícia Vedolin Sebastião (Department of Marketing, Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark)

International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Marketing

ISSN: 1750-6123

Article publication date: 13 June 2024

Issue publication date: 17 October 2024

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Abstract

Purpose

The changes in the service context due to COVID-19 have challenged service marketers to understand and react to consumers’ feelings that impact their shopping behavior in services. Moreover, consumers had to face a challenging situation with an impact on mental health. This study aims to assess the impact of spirituality and compassionate love as coping mechanisms that might increase hope, which, in turn, decreases anxiety. Hope also mitigates the impact of fear on anxiety. The authors also investigate the mediate effect of hope in its relationship to spirituality and well-being during the pandemic in Brazil and its potential impact on services marketing.

Design/methodology/approach

To investigate the relationship between fear, anxiety, hope, compassionate love, spirituality and well-being, the authors conducted an online survey with 469 Brazilians who had been in quarantine for more than 45 days. To conduct the investigation, the authors used a purposive sampling to reach respondents due to the exceptional situation of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Findings

Using a structural equation model, the authors found that hope is a mediator with a buffer effect on the relationships between anxiety and fear and between spirituality and anxiety. Moreover, the authors found that hope mediates the relationship between spirituality and well-being, leading to greater levels of well-being. Service companies in general can benefit from using these findings to better manage their relationships with consumers during and after COVID-19 pandemic.

Research limitations/implications

The sample included only Brazilian respondents, and pre-pandemic well-being was not measured.

Originality/value

There is evidence that traumatic events (e.g. war) influence feelings and consumer behavior. The findings suggest that the adoption of practices related to spirituality during an extreme, stressful situation has an influence on people’s hope and potentially mitigates anxiety. Increasing spirituality and hope can also benefit perceptions of well-being. Besides, in this context, the authors recommend that service providers communicate unobservable elements in a transaction (e.g. care, safety) by providing observable signals of spirituality and hope to reduce negative emotions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: The authors have no funding to disclose.

Compliance with ethical standards: All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre and with the 1964 Helsinki Declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.

Conflicts of interest: The authors declare they have no conflict of interest.

Informed consent: Informed consent was obtained from all individual adult participants included.

Citation

Terres, M.d.S., Rohden, S.F. and Sebastião, L.V. (2024), "COVID-sumers: consumers’ feelings due Covid-19 pandemic in Brazil and potential implications for services marketing", International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Marketing, Vol. 18 No. 4, pp. 649-674. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPHM-04-2022-0034

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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