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Roman Szałachowski

Publications -  7
Citations -  32

Roman Szałachowski is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Religiosity & Coping (psychology). The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications receiving 13 citations.

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The Mediating Effect of Coping Strategies on Religious/Spiritual Struggles and Life Satisfaction

TL;DR: This article found that religious comfort correlated positively with life satisfaction, while fear/guilt, negative emotions toward God, and negative social interactions surrounding religion correlated negatively with life-satisfaction, while both religious and secular methods of experiencing different strains seem to coexist with multiple other strategies in the context of broadly understood life satisfaction.
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“Dies Irae?” The Role of Religiosity in Dealing with Psychological Problems Caused by The COVID-19 Pandemic—Studies on a Polish Sample

TL;DR: Based on Huber's centrality of religiosity concept, a non-experimental research project was designed in a group of 178 women and 72 men, voluntary participants in online studies, quarantined at home during the first weeks (the first wave) of the pandemic, to determine whether and to what extent religiosity, understood as a multidimensional construct, was a predictor of the worsening of PTSD and depression symptoms in the conditions of the COVID-19 pandemic as discussed by the authors.
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The Big Five Personality Traits and Positive Orientation in Polish Adults with Multiple Sclerosis: The Role of Meaning in Life

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors made an attempt to analyze the indirect relationship between the above-mentioned variables, including meaning in life as a mediator, and found that positive orientation/the presence of meaning/searching for meaning correlated positively with extraversion, openness to experience, agreeableness, and conscientiousness, and were negatively associated with neuroticism.
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“Yes, in Crisis We Pray”. The Role of Prayer in Coping with Pandemic Fears

TL;DR: In this article, a non-experimental, moderated mediation project was designed in a group of 176 women and 84 men, who voluntarily participated in an online study, analysing the relationship between the prayer and the fears (for health, economy/finances, social life and family relations) during the COVID-19 pandemic.