2021
DOI: 10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph20212594
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Study of stress, anxiety, depression and coping strategies among nursing students in a tertiary care teaching hospital, South India

Abstract: Background: Nursing students are at extremely high risk for experiencing stress, anxiety, and depression due to their varied circumstances. Indian studies has revealed, moderate stress among 77-82% of nursing students. The better the nursing students can manage their stress and anxiety and adopt healthy coping strategy, the more successful they can be in their clinical training and academic performance. Objective of the current study was to estimate the prevalence of depression, anxiety, and stress among the B… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In our study, (65.3%) of the students reported self interest as the reason for choosing nursing education which is contrary to the findings reported by Samson P (72.4%) ( 5), Konwar G (89.17%) ( 14) and Das BN (78.5%) (15). In our study, (67.9%) of the students were satisfied with nursing profession as a career which is quite higher than findings by Rathnayake S et al (8) where only (2.2%) of the students were fully satisfied.…”
Section: Methodscontrasting
confidence: 99%
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“…In our study, (65.3%) of the students reported self interest as the reason for choosing nursing education which is contrary to the findings reported by Samson P (72.4%) ( 5), Konwar G (89.17%) ( 14) and Das BN (78.5%) (15). In our study, (67.9%) of the students were satisfied with nursing profession as a career which is quite higher than findings by Rathnayake S et al (8) where only (2.2%) of the students were fully satisfied.…”
Section: Methodscontrasting
confidence: 99%
“…In our study, 12.1% of the students had moderate stress, which is lower than findings by Telgote S et al (23%) (7) and Das DM (19.5%) (15). In our study, 5.1% of the students had severe stress which is lower than findings by Das DM (8.7%) (15). In our study, only 0.5% of the students had extremely severe stress which is almost similar to the findings by Das DM (1.3%) (15) but lower than findings reported by Rathnayake S et al (21.7%) (8).…”
Section: Aims and Objectivescontrasting
confidence: 77%
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