Psychological Impact during Confinement by COVID-19 on Health Sciences University Students—A Prospective, Longitudinal, and Comparative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- To analyze how personality, humor, coping with stressors, and resilience influence reactions at a confinement situation;
- To identify which factors can predict better adjustment and what type of person would need greater support in such a situation;
- To learn the evolution of a cohort of nursing and physiotherapy students in three situations: in a normal situation at the beginning of the academic course, exposed to an intense academic stressor such as a partial test, and during confinement due to the pandemic.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design, Population, and Sample
2.2. Evaluation States or Situations
2.3. Measurement Scales and Variables
2.4. Ethical and Legal Aspects
2.5. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- The confinement situation presented stress characteristics different from those of an academic stress situation.
- A distinctive factor of the COVID-19 confinement was changes in affect, increasing negative and decreasing positive affect.
- The coping strategy that decreased during the confinement situation, perhaps due to its inefficacy, was “focus on and venting of emotions”.
- There as greater resilience during the confinement situation in subjects with lesser basal neuroticism.
- Subjects who presented conscientiousness as a personality factor further developed positive humor.
- Negative humor during the pandemic was particularly shown by subjects with lesser basal extraversion.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Sample n = 50 | Drops during the Study n = 28 | p |
---|---|---|---|
Mean or n (SD or %) | Mean or n (SD or %) | ||
Men | 1 (2) | 15 (53.6) | <0.001 |
Women | 49 (98) | 13 (46.4) | |
Age (years) | 19.9 (5.1) | 19.8 (5.7) | NSS |
Employed | 16 (32) | 8 (28.6) | NSS |
Nursing | 46 (92) | 18 (64.3) | <0.01 |
Physiotherapy | 4 (8) | 10 (35.7) |
Dimension | Mean (SD) | p (50) Adult Population | Score ≥ p (50) n (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Neuroticism | 25.3 (9.1) | 16 | 43 (86) |
Extraversion | 32.3 (8.1) | 34 | 24 (48) |
Openness | 32.1 (6.7) | 30 | 30 (60) |
Agreeableness | 30 (6.7) | 34 | 15 (30) |
Conscientiousness | 32.4 (6.9) | 36 | 15 (30) |
State 1 n = 50 | State 2 n = 50 | State 3 n = 50 | p * | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | ||
PANAS Scale | ||||
Positive affect | 32.8 (6.3) | 33.4 (5.8) | 24.9 (7.7) | <0.001 |
Negative affect | 22.1 (7.4) | 21.6 (7.2) | 26.3 (7.7) | <0.01 |
COPE-48 Scale | ||||
APFC | 25.9 (5) | 25.8 (3.8) | 25.3 (3.8) | NSS |
ADD | 4.6 (1.4) | 4.7 (1.4) | 4.6 (1.6) | NSS |
FVE | 11.4 (3) | 11 (3) | 10.5 (2.6) | <0.05 |
SSS | 23 (5.3) | 23.7 (5.7) | 22.3 (5.7) | NSS |
HUM | 9.4 (3.6) | 9.2 (3.5) | 9.3 (3.3) | NSS |
TTR | 6.9 (4.3) | 7.1 (4.4) | 7.2 (4.6) | NSS |
DEN | 5.2 (2) | 5.5 (2.1) | 5.3 (2.1) | NSS |
RC | 30.5 (5.7) | 31.5 (5.2) | 30.8 (4.7) | NSS |
Resilience Scale | ||||
PTS | 23.7 (4.5) | 23.8 (4.5) | 23 (4.9) | NSS |
CUP | 16.8 (4.4) | 17.2 (3.9) | 17 (4.4) | NSS |
ASN | 14.9 (3.2) | 15.6 (3.1) | 16.1 (3.5) | NSS |
CAM | 8.7 (2.1) | 8.9 (2) | 8.7 (2.3) | NSS |
SPR | 4.6 (2.4) | 4.3 (2.3) | 4.3 (2.5) | NSS |
RSC | 68.7 (11.4) | 69.8 (11) | 69.2 (13.7) | NSS |
Neuroticism | Extraversion | Openness | |||||||
Confinement (state 3) | <p (50) n = 7 | ≥p (50) n = 43 | p * | <p (50) n = 26 | ≥p (50) n = 24 | p * | <p (50) n = 20 | ≥p (50) n = 30 | p * |
Positive affect | 20.6 (5.5) | 25.6 (7.8) | 0.1 | 26.2 (8.1) | 23.5 (7.7) | 0.23 | 24.3 (8.3) | 25.3 (7.4) | 0.7 |
Negative affect | 30.5 (6.3) | 26.3 (7.7) | 0.1 | 24.5 (7.3) | 28.3 (7) | 0.08 | 26 (7) | 26.5 (8.11) | 0.84 |
Resilience | 78.9 (11.2) | 67.6 (13.6) | <0.05 | 67.2 (14.1) | 71.4 (13.4) | 0.29 | 69.2 (16.2) | 69.2 (12.4) | 0.99 |
Agreeableness | Conscientiousness | ||||||||
Confinement (state 3) | <p (50) n = 15 | ≥p (50) n = 35 | p * | <p (50) n = 15 | ≥p (50) n = 35 | p * | |||
Positive affect | 25.3 (8) | 23.5 (7) | 0.49 | 26.3 (7.5) | 21.7 (7.4) | <0.05 | |||
Negative affect | 25.9 (7.7) | 27.8 (7.7) | 0.47 | 25.4 (7.9) | 28.4 (6.8) | 0.21 | |||
Resilience | 68.7 (14) | 70.9 (12.8) | 0.63 | 68.7 (12.8) | 70.4 (16.1) | 0.69 |
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Mayor-Silva, L.I.; Romero-Saldaña, M.; Moreno-Pimentel, A.G.; Álvarez-Melcón, Á.C.; Molina-Luque, R.; Meneses-Monroy, A. Psychological Impact during Confinement by COVID-19 on Health Sciences University Students—A Prospective, Longitudinal, and Comparative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 9925. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169925
Mayor-Silva LI, Romero-Saldaña M, Moreno-Pimentel AG, Álvarez-Melcón ÁC, Molina-Luque R, Meneses-Monroy A. Psychological Impact during Confinement by COVID-19 on Health Sciences University Students—A Prospective, Longitudinal, and Comparative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(16):9925. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169925
Chicago/Turabian StyleMayor-Silva, Luis Iván, Manuel Romero-Saldaña, Antonio Gabriel Moreno-Pimentel, Ángela Concepción Álvarez-Melcón, Rafael Molina-Luque, and Alfonso Meneses-Monroy. 2022. "Psychological Impact during Confinement by COVID-19 on Health Sciences University Students—A Prospective, Longitudinal, and Comparative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 16: 9925. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169925
APA StyleMayor-Silva, L. I., Romero-Saldaña, M., Moreno-Pimentel, A. G., Álvarez-Melcón, Á. C., Molina-Luque, R., & Meneses-Monroy, A. (2022). Psychological Impact during Confinement by COVID-19 on Health Sciences University Students—A Prospective, Longitudinal, and Comparative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(16), 9925. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169925