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Murat Yıldırım

Researcher at Ağrı İbrahim Çeçen University

Publications -  68
Citations -  2531

Murat Yıldırım is an academic researcher from Ağrı İbrahim Çeçen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Happiness. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 68 publications receiving 931 citations. Previous affiliations of Murat Yıldırım include University of Leicester.

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The impacts of vulnerability, perceived risk, and fear on preventive behaviours against COVID-19.

TL;DR: Vulnerability, perceived risk, and fear can significantly increase engagement in preventive behaviours during the novel coronavirus pandemic, and the results have important implications for research and practice.
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Coronavirus Stress, Optimism-Pessimism, Psychological Inflexibility, and Psychological Health: Psychometric Properties of the Coronavirus Stress Measure.

TL;DR: Results elucidate the understanding of the role of mediators in coronavirus stress and psychological health problems and provide evidence for tailoring interventions and implementing preventative approaches to mitigate the psychopathological consequences of COVID-19.
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COVID-19 burnout, COVID-19 stress and resilience: Initial psychometric properties of COVID-19 Burnout Scale.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the COVID-19-BS is a psychometrically sound scale to measure burnout related to CO VID-19 and elucidate the understanding of the role of resilience in the relationship between stress and burnoutrelated to COVID -19.
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COVID-19 severity, self-efficacy, knowledge, preventive behaviors, and mental health in Turkey.

TL;DR: Regression analysis showed that COVID-19 severity, self-efficacy, and preventive behaviors uniquely predicted mental health over and above gender, age, and chronic diseases.
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Exploring the associations between resilience, dispositional hope, preventive behaviours, subjective well-being, and psychological health among adults during early stage of COVID-19.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the associations between resilience, dispositional hope, preventive behaviours, subjective well-being, and psychological health among adults during early stage of COVID-19.