大学生死亡焦虑及其人口学相关性研究

Q2 Social Sciences Studies on Ethno-Medicine Pub Date : 2019-05-08 DOI:10.31901/24566772.2019/13.03.591
C. Onuoha
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在尼日利亚一所大学的学生中,对死亡焦虑(衰老焦虑、宗教信仰、性别和学年)的人口学相关性进行了定量研究。共有250名本科生(女性=49.2%,平均年龄=21.95,SD=3.51)使用标准化问卷进行了方便的调查。调查问卷测量了死亡焦虑、衰老焦虑、宗教信仰、性别和学习年份。数据采用Pearson相关、单因素方差分析和独立样本t检验进行分析。结果表明,衰老焦虑与死亡焦虑呈正相关。研究结果还表明,死亡焦虑不受宗教信仰、性别和学年的显著影响。该研究建议进一步研究衰老焦虑可能与死亡恐惧有关的方面,以帮助设计有效的干预措施,降低大学生的死亡焦虑水平。1通信地址:Chibuzor Uchenna Onuoha引言对生命有限存在的认识会对我们的思想、感受和行为产生重大影响,因此死亡的想法往往会引起一些人的高度焦虑(Niemiec和Schulenberg,2011)。然而,年轻人被证明与更高水平的死亡相关恐惧密切相关(Chopik 2017;Russac等人2007)。死亡焦虑描述了与对死亡和死亡的恐惧、威胁、不安和不适加剧相关的心理状况(McKenzie和Brown,2017)。这是不同人口群体中的个人所经历的一个生存问题(Sinoff 2017)。调查为什么与其他人群相比,年轻人报告的死亡焦虑水平更高的研究已经确定了个人特征,包括接触垂死患者(Edo-Gual等人,2014;Ek等人,2014)、宗教信仰(Chow 2017;Jong和Halberstadt 2016)、性别(Asari和Lankarani 2016;Dadfar等人,2018)和年龄(Krause等人,2018年)是相关因素。值得注意的是,这些研究大多是在公民预期寿命已经较高的国家进行的。但是,在尼日利亚等预期寿命低于全球平均水平的国家,需要进行研究,以调查衰老焦虑、宗教信仰、性别和学年与大学生死亡焦虑的关系。
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Death Anxiety and Associated Demographic Correlates in a Sample of University Students
Demographic correlates of death anxiety (ageing anxiety, religiosity, gender and academic study year) were quantitatively examined among students in a Nigerian university. A total of 250 undergraduate students (females = 49.2%, mean age = 21.95, SD = 3.51) were conveniently surveyed using a standardized questionnaire. The questionnaire measured death anxiety, ageing anxiety, religiosity, gender and academic study year. Data were analyzed with Pearson Correlation, One-Way ANOVA and independent samples t-test. Results showed that ageing anxiety positively associated with death anxiety. Results also revealed that death anxiety was not significantly influenced by religiosity, gender and academic study year. The study recommends further research on aspects of ageing anxiety that may be linked to the fear of death to aid the design of effective interventions to reduce levels of death anxiety among university students. 1Address for correspondence: Chibuzor Uchenna Onuoha INTRODUCTION Awareness of life’s finite existence can significantly impact on our thoughts, feelings, and behaviour, so that the thought of dying tend to arouse high levels of anxiety in some people (Niemiec and Schulenberg 2011). However, being a younger person has been shown to be strongly associated with higher levels of deathrelated fear (Chopik 2017; Russac et al. 2007). Death anxiety describes the psychological condition associated with heightened fear, threat, unease and discomfort with death and dying (McKenzie and Brown 2017). It is an existential issue experienced by individuals across the various demographic groupings (Sinoff 2017). Research that investigated why younger people report higher levels of death anxiety compared to other population cohorts have identified personal attributes including exposure to dying patients (Edo-Gual et al. 2014; Ek et al. 2014), religiosity (Chow 2017; Jong and Halberstadt 2016), gender (Asari and Lankarani 2016; Dadfar et al. 2018) and age (Krause et al. 2018) as correlates. It is noteworthy that most of these studies were conducted in countries where the citizens already enjoy higher life expectancy. But research is needed to investigate the extent to which ageing anxiety, religiosity, gender and academic study year are related to death anxiety among university students in countries like Nigeria with a low life expectancy relative to the global average.
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来源期刊
Studies on Ethno-Medicine
Studies on Ethno-Medicine Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: Studies on Ethno-Medicine is a peer reviewed, internationally circulated journal. It publishes reports of original research, theoretical articles, timely reviews, brief communications, book reviews and other publications in the interdisciplinary field of ethno-medicine. The journal serves as a forum for physical, social and life scientists as well as for health professionals. The transdisciplinary areas covered by this journal include, but are not limited to, Physical Sciences, Anthropology, Sociology, Geography, Life Sciences, Environmental Sciences, Botany, Agriculture, Home Science, Zoology, Genetics, Biology, Medical Sciences, Public Health, Demography and Epidemiology. The journal publishes basic, applied and methodologically oriented research from all such areas. The journal is committed to prompt review, and priority publication is given to manuscripts with novel or timely findings, and to manuscript of unusual interest. Further, the manuscripts are categorised under three types, namely - Regular articles, Short Communications and Reviews. The researchers are invited to submit original papers in English (papers published elsewhere or under consideration elsewhere shall not be considered).
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