Literature DB >> 16050324

Personal, health, academic, and environmental predictors of stress for residence hall students.

Lauri Dusselier1, Brian Dunn, Yongyi Wang, Mack C Shelley, Donald F Whalen.   

Abstract

The authors studied contributors to stress among undergraduate residence hall students at a midwestern, land grant university using a 76-item survey consisting of personal, health, academic, and environmental questions and 1 qualitative question asking what thing stressed them the most. Of 964 students selected at random, 462 (48%) responded to the survey. The authors weighted data to reflect the overall university-wide undergraduate population (55% men, 12% minority or international, and 25% freshmen). Women and US citizens experienced greater stress than did men and non-US citizens, respectively. Frequency of experiencing chronic illness, depression, anxiety disorder, seasonal affective disorder, mononucleosis, and sleep difficulties were significant stress predictors. Although alcohol use was a positive predictor, drug use was a negative predictor of stress. Both a conflict and a satisfactory relationship with a roommate, as well as a conflict with a faculty or staff member, were also significant predictors of stress.

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Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16050324     DOI: 10.3200/JACH.54.1.15-24

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Coll Health        ISSN: 0744-8481


  23 in total

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9.  The relationship between financial strain, perceived stress, psychological symptoms, and academic and social integration in undergraduate students.

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10.  Mental Well-Being in UK Higher Education During Covid-19: Do Students Trust Universities and the Government?

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