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The concept of COVID-19 Perceptions or COVID-19 Perception, also known as Pandemic Perceptions or Pandemic Perception, was first introduced by Mahmoud, Grigoriou, Fuxman, et al. (2020).[1].
COVID-19 perceptions can be described as the subjective likelihood of discomfort and/or concern, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, related to the pandemic's negative impact on health, economy, and society, expressed as disruptions to people's pre-pandemic daily lives – resulting in the redefinition of daily life as the 'new normal' [2]. The conceptualization of COVID-19 perceptions builds upon previous research on the personal experience of wartime crises.[3] Mahmoud and Reisel (2015) explored the effects of wartime crisis on job insecurity in Syria, providing a foundation for understanding how large-scale disruptions impact individual perceptions.[3] Later studies by Mahmoud et al. extended this framework to the context of the COVID-19 pandemic [1]
- ^ a b Mahmoud, A. B.; Grigoriou, N.; Fuxman, L.; Reisel, W. D.; Hack-Polay, D.; Mohr, I. (2020). "A generational study of employees' customer orientation: A motivational viewpoint in pandemic time". Journal of Strategic Marketing. 30 (8): 746–763. doi:10.1080/0965254x.2020.1844785.
- ^ Mahmoud, A. B.; Hack-Polay, D.; Fuxman, L.; Nicoletti, M. (2021). "The Janus-faced effects of COVID-19 perceptions on family healthy eating behavior: Parent's negative experience as a mediator and gender as a moderator". Scandinavian Journal of Psychology. 62 (4): 586–595. doi:10.1111/sjop.12742.
- ^ a b Mahmoud, A. B.; Reisel, W. D. (2015). "Exploring personal experience of wartime crisis effects on job insecurity in Syria". Psihologia Resurselor Umane. 13 (2): 245–256.
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