Exploring the impact of physical exercise on mental health among female college students: the chain mediating role of coping styles and psychological resilience

Front Psychol. 2024 Nov 18:15:1466327. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1466327. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Background: Female college students are a high-risk group for psychological conflicts, and they are more likely to adopt negative coping styles under stress, which can lead to anxiety, depression, and other psychological problems, as well as pose hidden threats to the healthy development of school education and social work. Although physical exercise is an important means of effectively alleviating the psychological health of female college students, and there may be a close relationship between coping styles and psychological resilience with physical exercise and psychological health, specific ways to promote the psychological health of female college students by influencing their coping styles and enhancing their psychological resilience have yet to be explored.

Methods: The present study employed a cross-sectional design to investigate a sample of Chinese undergraduate female college students. A total of 659 participants were recruited during the second half of the 2023-2024 academic year, and they all completed assessments including the Physical Activity Rating Scale, College Mental Health Scale, Brief Coping Styles Questionnaire, and Psychological Resilience Scale. Subsequently, descriptive statistics were utilized to analyze the obtained reliable data.

Results and conclusion: The study revealed two significant correlations among female college students, namely the associations between physical exercise, coping styles, psychological flexibility, and mental health. Specifically, physical exercise exhibited a positive relationship with positive coping styles and psychological resilience while displaying a negative association with negative coping styles and mental health. Moreover, psychological resilience demonstrated a positive correlation with positive coping styles but displayed negative relationships with both negative coping styles and mental health. Additionally, there was a negative relationship observed between positive coping styles and mental health. Furthermore, it was found that physical exercise significantly impacted the mental health of female college students in a detrimental manner; meanwhile, coping styles and psychological resilience played crucial mediating roles in linking physical exercise to mental health outcomes. Ultimately, our mediation model sheds the underlying mechanisms through which physical exercise predicts mental health levels among female college students; these findings underscore the importance of promoting physical exercise as an effective means to enhance overall well-being.

Keywords: coping styles; female college students; mental health; physical exercise; psychological resilience.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Title: Research on Modeling Human Emotional Physiological Response System and Its Application, Number of approval: 61472330); the Major Project of Humanities and Social Sciences Research of Southwest University (Title: Research on the Influence of Exercise on Cognitive Functions, Number of approval: 2019SWU1909026); the Postgraduate Research and Innovation Project of Southwest University (Title: Exploration of the digitalization practice in the sports industry in the Sichuan-Chongqing region during the era of artificial intelligence, Number of approval: SWUS23037).