Volume 59, Issue 12 pp. 1387-1403
Discussion

Dispositional and contextual perspectives on coping: Toward an integrative framework

Rudolf H. Moos

Corresponding Author

Rudolf H. Moos

Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System and Stanford University

Center for Health Care Evaluation (152-MPD), 795 Willow Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025; e-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Charles J. Holahan

Charles J. Holahan

University of Texas at Austin

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First published: 09 October 2003
Citations: 237

Abstract

The clinical disciplines have witnessed a rapidly growing literature on the conceptualization and measurement of coping and on the role of coping in confronting stressful life circumstances and maintaining adaptive functioning. This literature has spawned a diversity of concepts and contrasting perspectives on the determinants and effects of coping. To address this complexity, we comment on dispositional and contextual perspectives on the coping process, describe the domains of coping styles and coping skills, and review some measures of these constructs. Next, we present a conceptual framework that integrates key aspects of these constructs and use the framework to guide a selective review of the linkages between personal and social resources, coping skills, and adaptive functioning. We then consider applications of the framework to clinical practice. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Psychol.

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