Àá½Ã¸¸ ±â´Ù·Á ÁÖ¼¼¿ä. ·ÎµùÁßÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
KMID : 1035420240120010097
Journal of The Korean Society of Integrative Medicine
2024 Volume.12 No. 1 p.97 ~ p.108
Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Nursing Students¡¯ Adjustment to College Life : Focus on empathic ability, perceived stress, and resilience
Choi Yooun-Sook

Kim Mi-Young
Abstract
Purpose : In this study, we aimed to determine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on nursing students' adjustment to college life by focusing on their empathic ability, perceived stress, and resilience.

Methods : We applied a descriptive survey research design, which included a self-report questionnaire. The participants comprised 307 nursing students in B city. The data were analyzed by calculating the percentages, means, standard deviations, t-tests, ANOVA, Scheffe test, Pearson's correlation coefficients, and hierarchical regression using SPSS 23.0.

Results : The participants' empathic ability score was 3.30¡¾.42, perceived stress score 1.85¡¾.49, resilience score 3.44¡¾.64, and adjustment to college life score 3.25¡¾.52. Adjustment to college life was positively correlated with resilience (r=.43, p<.001) but negatively correlated with perceived stress (r=.27, p<.001). Factors affecting adjustment to college life include, among general characteristics in Model 1, in descending order, major satisfaction-satisfied (¥â=.54, p<.001), interpersonal conflict: never (¥â=.26, p=.018), health status: healthy (¥â=.25, p=.002), character: positive (¥â=.21, p=.006), character: optimistic (¥â=.19, p=.015), parents' economic power: high (¥â=.15, p=.047), and gender: male (¥â=.11, p=.016). Model 1 was statistically significant (F=11.67, p<.001), and the explanatory power was 41 %. In Model 2, empathic ability, perceived stress, and resilience were added as independent variables. When including the dependent variables, the factors that most influenced adjustment to college life were perceived stress (¥â=-.37, p<.001), major satisfaction-satisfied (¥â=.36, p<.001), health status-healthy (¥â=.25, p<.001), gender-male (¥â=.10, p=.015), and resilience (¥â=.10, p=.029). Model 2 was statistically significant (F=17.65, p<.001), and the explanatory power was 56 %.

Conclusion : We found that gender, major satisfaction, health status, perceived stress, and resilience affected adjustment to college life among nursing students who had experienced the COVID-19 pandemic. To increase their ability to adjust to college life, a gender-specific intervention program should be developed that can improve the students' health status, major satisfaction and resilience, and reduce their perceived stress.
KEYWORD
adjustment to college life, COVID-19 pandemic, empathic ability, perceived resilience, stress
FullTexts / Linksout information
Listed journal information