Journal of Healthcare Administration (Dec 2023)

Anxiety among student nurses in the Philippines: A gender and year-level analysis and its contributing factors in the COVID-19 context

  • Florence L. Pulido,
  • Richelle Faith D. Cayabyab,
  • Allura Xandra M. Adversalo,
  • Alyssa V. Baylon,
  • Aubrey N. Centeno,
  • Aea Jainey G. Dizon,
  • Marc Andrei L. Formoso,
  • Alexis Angel P. Hernando,
  • Eric Jon Luis B. Jucutan,
  • Justine Anthonell G. Maltu,
  • Daniel Joy R. Pia,
  • Chaste Priel T. Sally,
  • Angeline Ysabelle R. Tulagan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.33546/joha.2744
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 2

Abstract

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Background: The shift to online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic has raised concerns and heightened anxiety levels, especially among student nurses adapting to academic and clinical challenges. Objective: This study aimed to assess the anxiety levels of student nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic, examining gender and year-level differences and identifying contributing factors. Methods: A quantitative descriptive research design was employed, involving 305 student nurses from Levels 1 to 4, selected using proportionate stratified and systematic random sampling at a Philippine nursing school. Data were collected in March 2022 using the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) and a self-made questionnaire. Descriptive and inferential statistics, including frequencies, percentages, means, Independent t-tests, and ANOVA, were utilized with a significance level of 0.05. Results: The mean anxiety level among student nurses was 1.61, significantly differing by year level and gender (p <0.05). The most contributing factor of anxiety was ‘the adjustments to make with the sudden change of face-to-face classes to online or distance learning mode’ (90.16%), while the least factor was ‘lack of financial sources' (46.23%). Conclusion: Student nurses had moderate anxiety levels, with gender and year level as significant contributing factors. Female student nurses experienced higher anxiety levels than males, and lower-level students experienced greater anxiety than their higher-level counterparts. Various factors, including academic, social, financial, and perceived health risk-related factors, affected student nurses’ anxiety levels, with academic-related factors having the most significant impact and financial-related factors having the least impact.

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