COVID-19 大流行期间美国大学生的健康与幸福:每日日记研究》。

IF 1.9 Q3 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Stephanie T Lanza, Courtney Whetzel, Sandesh Bhandari
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:有证据表明,在 COVID-19 大流行期间,大学生的焦虑和压力有所增加。然而,人们对这一人群的日常情感体验、担忧、药物使用行为、愉悦体验、对食品安全的担忧、偏见或歧视体验、归属感以及其他幸福感指标及其在不同日子里的变化知之甚少:本研究以美国一所大型大学系统的大学生为样本,调查了大流行病期间 21 天内日常生活中的各种健康和幸福指标。对每项日常指标的总体差异进行了划分,以反映由于(1)人与人之间的差异和(2)人与人之间的日常差异所造成的比例。这一点很重要,因为主要因人与人之间的差异而变化的测量结果可能更适合针对特定学生的干预措施,而更多因日常变化而变化的测量结果可能更适合针对日常背景因素的干预措施:2068名青年大学生(18-24岁,平均19.8岁,标准差1.3岁;66.6%为女性)完成了基线调查;97.3%的学生(n=2012)随后完成了多达21项连续的日常调查,这些调查对健康、行为和幸福感的日常指标进行了全面评估。每日日记研究共产生 33,722 人天:在所有的人日中,有少数人日使用了药物(例如,14.5%的人日使用了酒精,5.6%的人日使用了烟草,5.5%的人日使用了大麻)。大多数人(73.5%)都有愉悦体验。人与人之间的差异可以解释50%以上的健康和幸福指标差异,包括每天吸食大麻、吸食大麻、吸食其他非法药物、遭受偏见或歧视、积极情绪、消极情绪、担忧、食物不安全以及对大学的归属感。与此相反,人与人之间的差异可以解释每天饮酒、吸烟、压力、快乐体验、昨晚在哪里睡觉以及体育活动等方面50%以上的差异:大学生的健康和幸福是多方面的,有些方面可能是由个人层面的特征和经历驱动的,而另一些方面则是由日常生活中发生的更具动态性、情境性的风险因素驱动的。这些发现表明,应针对个别学生提供服务和干预措施,而不是针对学生出现不良经历或行为的高风险日提供服务和干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health and Well-Being Among College Students in the United States During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Daily Diary Study.

Background: There is evidence that anxiety and stress increased among college students during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, less is known about daily experiences of affect, worry, substance use behaviors, experiences of pleasure, concern over food security, experiences of bias or discrimination, feelings of belongingness, and other indicators of well-being and how they vary across days in this population.

Objective: This study surveyed a wide range of indicators of health and well-being in daily life over 21 days with a sample of college students in a large university system in the United States during the pandemic. The overall variance in each daily measure was partitioned to reflect the proportion due to (1) between-person differences versus (2) within-person, day-to-day variability. This is important because measures that vary primarily due to between-person differences may be more amenable to interventions that target particular students, whereas measures that vary more due to day-to-day variability may be more amenable to interventions that target day-level contextual factors.

Methods: A sample of 2068 young adult college students (aged 18-24, mean 19.8, SD 1.3 years; 66.6% women) completed a baseline survey; 97.3% (n=2012) then completed up to 21 consecutive daily surveys that assessed a comprehensive set of daily markers of health, behavior, and well-being. The daily diary study produced a total of 33,722 person-days.

Results: Among all person-days, a minority were substance use days (eg, 14.5% of days involved alcohol use, 5.6% vaping, and 5.5% cannabis). Experiences of pleasure were reported on most (73.5%) days. Between-person differences explained more than 50% of the variance in numerous indicators of health and well-being, including daily vaping, cannabis use, other illicit substance use, experiences of bias or discrimination, positive affect, negative affect, worry, food insecurity, and feelings of belonging at the university. In contrast, within-person differences explained more than 50% of the variance in daily alcohol use, cigarette use, stress, experiences of pleasure, where the student slept last night, and physical activity.

Conclusions: College student health and well-being are multifaceted, with some aspects likely driven by person-level characteristics and experiences and other aspects by more dynamic, contextual risk factors that occur in daily life. These findings implicate services and interventions that should target individual students versus those that should target days on which students are at high risk for poor experiences or behaviors.

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Interactive Journal of Medical Research
Interactive Journal of Medical Research MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL-
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