Wiese, MelanieVan der Westhuizen, Liezl-Marie2024-05-142024-05-142023-03Wiese, M. & Van der Westhuizen, L.-M. 2023, 'Public coping discourse in response to government health crisis communication', Corporate Communications: An International Journal, vol. 28, no. 7, pp. 44-67. DOI 10.1108/CCIJ-07-2022-0089.1356-328910.1108/CCIJ-07-2022-0089http://hdl.handle.net/2263/95939PURPOSE – This study aims to explore public coping strategies with government-imposed lockdown restrictions (i.e. forced compliance) due to a health crisis (i.e. COVID-19). This directly impacts the public’s power, as they may feel alienated from their environment and from others. Consequently, this study explores the relationships between the public’s power, quality of life and crisis-coping strategies. This is important to help governments understand public discourse surrounding perceived government health crisis communication, which aids effective policy development. DESIGN/METHOD/APPROACH – An online questionnaire distributed via Qualtrics received 371 responses from the South African public and structural equation modelling was used to test the hypotheses. FINDINGS – The results indicate the public’s experience of powerlessness and resulting information-sharing, negative word-of-mouth and support-seeking as crisis coping strategies in response to government-imposed lockdown restrictions. ORIGINALITY/VALUE – The public’s perspective on health crisis communication used in this study sheds light on adaptive and maladaptive coping strategies that the public employs due to the alienation they feel during a health crisis with government-forced compliance. The findings add to the sparse research on crisis communication from the public perspective in a developing country context and provide insights for governments in developing health crisis communication strategies. The results give insight into developing policies related to community engagement and citizen participation during a pandemic.en© Melanie Wiese and Liezl-Mari e Van Der Westhuizen. Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. This article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license.PowerCoping strategiesQuality of lifeInformation-sharingCrises communicationSupport-seekingQuality of life (QoL)Public coping discourse in response to government health crisis communicationArticle