“I do think that accessibility is a really major thing that has come [out] of [the] pandemic”: The lived experiences of resilience and health-related quality of life among a diverse sample of graduate students during the COVID-19 pandemic
Katie J. Shillington, Shauna M. Burke, Tara Mantler, Jennifer D. Irwin

TL;DR
This study explores how graduate students from diverse backgrounds experienced resilience and quality of life during the pandemic.
Contribution
It provides a qualitative, diverse perspective on graduate students' resilience and health during the pandemic.
Findings
Cultural background and privilege significantly influence graduate students' resilience.
The pandemic disproportionately undermined resilience among equity-deserving groups.
Disability and chronic pain played a key role in shaping students' experiences of resilience.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has negatively impacted the mental health and wellbeing of post-secondary students. Resilience has been found to serve as a protective factor against mental distress among students during the pandemic. Despite the plethora of research that exists on post-secondary students during this crisis, most studies exploring students’ health and resilience are quantitative and lack diversity. To date, the lived experiences of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and resilience among graduate students representing diversity in age, gender, ethnicity, parental status, university, degree, and faculty during the COVID-19 pandemic remain unknown. As a part of a larger study, the purpose of this qualitative paper was to understand the lived experiences of resilience and HRQOL among a diverse sample of graduate students approximately 18 months into the COVID-19 pandemic in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsResilience and Mental Health · COVID-19 and Mental Health · Occupational Therapy Practice and Research
