| Literature DB >> 32219601 |
Rayna Rogowsky1, Anita Laidlaw1, Gozde Ozakinci2.
Abstract
The health care needs and service experiences of higher education students require more research attention, given the increase in students who have a long-term illness, medical condition, or disability ("condition"). It is also important to consider the experiences of rising numbers of international students. This exploratory qualitative study used face-to-face interviews and the common-sense model of self-regulation to investigate students' perceptions and coping behaviours, in a higher education institution in the UK. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data. Twenty students who self-identified as having a condition were interviewed. This study adds depth to the understanding of the connections between students' health-related experiences and their personal, academic, and post-graduation aspirations and the support needs of students, including international students. To optimise institutional support, innovations in partnerships with local care organisations and within the university, staff training about conditions, peer mentorship, and information outreach especially to international students, should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: Health care seeking; Health care use; Qualitative research; Symptom reporting; University students
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32219601 PMCID: PMC7674182 DOI: 10.1007/s10865-020-00147-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Behav Med ISSN: 0160-7715
Participant characteristics
| ID | Condition |
|---|---|
| 1F | Asthma |
| 1M | Depression |
| 2F | Polycystic ovary syndrome |
| 3F | Complex regional pain syndrome, myalgic encephalopathy, tremor |
| 4F | Dyslexia and anxietya |
| 2M | Depression, anxiety |
| 5F | Short-sightedness |
| 6F | Hashimoto’s disease |
| 7F | Bulimia |
| 8F | Myalgic encephalopathy |
| 9F | Type 1 diabetes |
| 3M | Purely obsessional obsessive compulsive disorder (Pure-0) |
| 10F | Coeliac disease |
| 11F | Major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety |
| 1GQ | Chronic gastritis and anxiety/depression^ |
| 12F | Eating disorder |
| 13F | Type 1 diabetes |
| 14F | Arthritis and bipolar disorder (remission)^ |
| 15F | Eczema, acne |
| 16F | Post Lyme disease syndrome |
aParticipant answered questions for each condition
Timeline perceptions related to future planning
| (8F, myalgic encephalopathy | ‘I’ve had to cater [for] it so that my day starts at 11 o’clock or 12 o’clock every day, and it makes me concerned for the future. Like how am I supposed to maintain a 9-5 job if I can’t guarantee attendance at 14 h of tutorial and class a week?’ |
| (16F, post Lyme disease syndrome). | ‘I feel very, very concerned sometimes, when I think what if this lasts for a long time, or for even longer, what does it look like if I want to have children, if I end up, the absolute last thing I would want is to be a mother who can’t, who can’t, be there for her children, and that would be, that would probably be my worst fear’ |
| 7F, bulimia | ‘It kind of goes through phases, but I’m just concerned that things won’t get better or that they’ll continue to be a big factor in my life. Especially when I’m not at university when I won’t have so much control over when I work or what I do. Like, I’m going into medicine, I’m going to have to be on shifts and things like that where I can’t exercise as much as I’d like, and honestly that has that worries me a bit. But I think it’s step by step, eventually I’ll get there’ |
Consequence perceptions related to social experience
| 2F, complex regional pain syndrome | ‘I’m in real pain, and they’re like, ‘You’re imagining it, it’s fine’ |
| 12F, eating disorder | ‘Students maybe do judge you because they don’t know, they don’t have experience with mental health…I thought I will tell my close friends that I made here because then if I’m having a bad day they’ll know what a bad day is.’ (12F, eating disorder) |
| 14F bipolar disorder- remission, arthritis | ‘There’s a lot more of a social stigma around it so it kind of affects me on a like, I feel a lot more comfortable telling people that I’ve got arthritis compared to like bipolar. And I think if it had been the other way around like I had arthritis in remission and bipolar not in remission then I think my life would in some ways be a lot harder’ |
| 15F, eczema, acne | ‘The ideas around eczema are not the same as they are acne, like acne is something that happens in like kind of teenage years and it’s the sort of thing that you expect that can kind of go away. Having it as a young adult is like hard to deal with. So it’s kind of issues of self-esteem and self-confidence’ |
Control perceptions related to physical activity
| 6F, Hashimoto’s disease | ‘Yeah I think for me, doing sports that are offered, like it’s really, really helpful. I would put it as number one most helpful thing…’ |
| 14F, arthritis | ‘…On an NHS level, you know like I know in some places they prescribe like exercises you know like gym sessions… but the ones [here] they don’t seem to do that. When I’ve sort of enquired about it I think sometimes the financial factors can be quite a deterrent for students, but I think it would end up saving the NHS more money in the long term |
| 11F, major depressive disorder and generalised anxiety | ‘I’m exercising so that’s probably the thing that makes me feel like I have the most control’ |
Research conditions: coping related to control perceptions
| 7F bulimia | ‘I’ve done a lot of research into it, trying to help myself’ |
| 15F, eczema, acne | ‘I was old enough to kind of like do my own research and figure out like what was the action I wanted to take for it’ |
| 12F, eating disorder | ‘I’ll go and watch a YouTube video of someone who’s done recovery videos. And it’s like really motivational because it’s almost like Student Services is there but like out of hours because those videos are there you know like for support… I just like googled it like eating disorder recovery so there’s quite a lot of videos on there, they’re really helpful if you have like bad days’ |
| 3 M, Pure-O | ‘I think I have read almost everything, I dare say, all the books in the world about Pure-O’ |