社会经济对理疗师学生财务知识、自我效能感、压力和焦虑的影响。

Journal, physical therapy education Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-29 DOI:10.1097/JTE.0000000000000348
Edward P Mulligan, Patrick S Pabian, Tara Dickson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:物理治疗学博士(DPT)学生在毕业时背负着大量的教育债务,他们的金融知识水平很低,金融自我效能感有限,压力和焦虑也很高。本研究旨在确定 DPT 学生的金融知识、金融焦虑、金融压力和金融自我效能与社会经济决定因素之间的关系:578 名 DPT 学生,通过横断面抽样方便地进行了调查:受试者回答了一份包含 40 个项目的人口统计学问卷,对其当前的财务知识、财务自我效能感、财务焦虑、财务压力和一般社会支持水平进行了自我评估。采用配对相关法确定自变量与自我评估工具综合得分之间的关系。根据社会经济指标和教育债务状况,对财务知识、自我效能感、焦虑、压力和社会支持进行了多元回归分析:虽然所有学生的债务状况与财务自我效能感和财务焦虑之间存在中等程度的正相关(r = .55),但不同种族/族裔的学生在财务知识、自我效能感、焦虑、压力和社会支持方面没有显著的统计学差异。基于年龄、种族/族裔、性别、社会经济背景、债务负担、风险承受能力和退休反思的财务知识、财务自我效能感和财务焦虑程度之间的相关性微弱到可以忽略不计。在进行多元回归分析时,与教育相关的债务水平可以解释财务自我效能感、焦虑和压力等多项指标的大部分差异。在学生感受到的一般社会支持方面,经济背景可以解释很大一部分差异:我们发现,在所有接受调查的 DPT 学生中,债务的存在与财务压力和焦虑之间存在很强的正相关性。虽然不同种族和民族背景的学生在财务知识和自我效能感方面没有差异,但所有学生的自我效能感和财务焦虑之间存在中等程度的相关性。关于债务管理策略的教育可能会减少这两个因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Socioeconomic Influence on Physical Therapist Student Financial Literacy, Self-Efficacy, Stress, and Anxiety.

Introduction: Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) students have considerable educational debt upon graduation with suspected low levels of financial literacy, limited financial self-efficacy, and elevated stress and anxiety. The purpose of this study was to determine the relationships between financial knowledge, financial anxiety, financial stress, and financial self-efficacy with socioeconomic determinants in DPT students.

Subjects: Five hundred seventy-eight DPT students, surveyed through a cross-sectional sample of convenience.

Methods: Participants responded to a 40-item demographic questionnaire providing a self-assessment of their current financial literacy, financial self-efficacy, financial anxiety, financial stress, and level of general social support. Pairwise correlations were used to determine the relationship between independent variables and composite scores on self-assessment tools. Multiple regression analyses were conducted to predict financial knowledge, self-efficacy, anxiety, stress, and social support by socioeconomic indicators and educational debt status.

Results: While there was a moderate, positive association between presence of debt and financial self-efficacy and financial anxiety for all students (r = .55), there was no statistically significant difference in financial knowledge, self-efficacy, anxiety, stress, or social support for students based on race/ethnicity. There was a negligible to weak correlation between financial knowledge, financial self-efficacy, and level of financial anxiety based on age, race/ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic background, debt load, risk tolerance, and retirement reflection. When subjected to multiple regression analysis, the level of education-related debt could explain a large proportion of the variance in multiple measures, including financial self-efficacy, anxiety, and stress. Economic background explained a large proportion of variance in the general social support students felt.

Discussion and conclusion: We found a strong, positive correlation between the presence of debt and financial stress and anxiety for all DPT student respondents. While there is no difference in financial literacy and self-efficacy based on race and ethnic background, there is a moderate correlation between self-efficacy and financial anxiety for all students. Education on strategies to manage debt load may reduce both factors.

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